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Old 10-26-2002, 06:44 AM   #21
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Hello Geo,
I’m glad to hear you are experimenting, but I don’t think you are interpreting your observations clearly.

Quote:
Originally posted by GeoTheo:
<strong> I also noticed that my conscience remained the same and that it impelled me to make the same types of moral choices I made as a Christian</strong>
Let me propose an explanation that fits your observation and allows us to make predictions (i.e. a theory in the scientific sense):

Christianity has nothing to do with being moral. You started as a moral person, so during your experiment you stay a moral person. Being a Christian is irrelevant to your moral character. Morals are not derived from God, but from common sense and the fact that humans live in a society.

Does this sound like it might be a workable hypothesis? How could we verify this?
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Old 10-26-2002, 07:18 AM   #22
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I've been tracking this board for a while off and on, and you were among my favorite Christians to listen to... did someone hijack your account? Because you've never sounded this ranty before.

Quote:
Originally posted by GeoTheo:
<strong>Do I think Christians are a bunch of assholes now? The answer was a resounding No.</strong>
I don't either. But then, I also stay out of the existence of gods board.

Quote:
<strong>So then I asked myself. Which is more likely- The infidels are largely anti-Christian because they are atheists or are they atheists as a result of being anti Christian? I decided it was the later.</strong>
I don't quite follow what you mean here... what does it mean to you for someone to be anti-Christian? I'm an athiest because ultimately I came to a juncture in my life where fundamentalism and atheism were the only beliefs open to me. To believe in "biblical truth" meant I didn't have the moral authority to disregard the parts of the Bible that conflicted with "worldly truth"... and I could go out and verify worldly truths wherever i turned, often to the contradiction of biblical assertions... so Christianity lost one more. Does that make me anti-Christian?

Quote:
<strong>I also noticed that my conscience remained the same and that it impelled me to make the same types of moral choices I made as a Christian. My conscience has always been aligned with the teachings of Christianity and actually predates my knowledge of the teachings of Christianity, ...</strong>
The moral teaching of Christianity have, since Jesus's day, closely tracked the mores of the society at large (as some posters have said, slavery is a great example), this doesn't surprise me in the least.

Quote:
<strong>... even though I also can identify parts or forces within me that cause me to somtimes want to go against it. I then realized that I would now be faced with a choice of whether to follow my conscience or not.
If I follow my concience I will be living more or less acording to Biblical morality. But it will not be based on a belief that this conscience comes from God.</strong>
Biblical morality or contemporary Christian, I dare say contemporary western, morality...

Quote:
<strong>Does my moral code seem to reflect that of the infidels for the most part?
I answered no.</strong>
What's my moral code...
  • In this order...
  • First, don't deliberately hurt (physically, emotionally) others (or their property).
  • Second, don't engage in reckless behavior likely to hurt others.
  • Uphold the obligations i've placed upon myself... notwithstanding challenges of items (1) and (2).
  • Foster the well-being of myself and those close to me.
Quote:
<strong>I then asked myself which is more likely- infidels have no conscience or they do and go against it. I would say they go against it.</strong>
In what ways do you think that athiests are more likely to go against their consciences than more likely than theists... aside from lack of belief in gods? (This assumes that you believe your conscience tells you to believe in your God.)

Quote:
<strong>Which is more likely They go against their consciences because they are atheists or they are atheists because they go against their conciences.
I answerd that the later is most likely.</strong>
I find that remark personally insulting.

Quote:
<strong>My concience is somthing, as I look over my life, has caused me to reflect on the existence of God.
I have no reason to believe this principle does not operate this way in others. </strong>
Right. My mother, fundie that she is, raised me to be a curious, scientifically-minded, critical thinker. My conscience impelled me to feverishly look over the issue of the existance of God, the existance of gods in general, and the supernatural more generally... my conscience wouldn't let me believe until I tore my belief apart and put it back together first... but no matter how I tried to put it back together, it fell apart.

Why is it that 99.999999999% of natural history was wasted on animals not complex enough to believe in "the one true God"? Didn't need four billion years to develop a human-sustaining ecosystem, two billion maybe.

Why was 99.9% of all humanity ever, condemned by sin as it was, not privy to the revelation of "the one true God"?

I could go on forever

Quote:
<strong>So in order to be an atheist I would have to choose to go against my consience.</strong>
Then don't, please do not, try to become an athiest! You will not be happy. You weren't happy! I would never wish that upon you. I would never want to do that to you. But don't assume that we all have consciences that demand the worship of your God, and that we're running around and spiting those consciences.

Quote:
<strong>Do not think I am unaware you atheists probably have all sorts of rationalizations that the concience is subjective and entirely a product of social conditioning. How could you not?</strong>
They're not rationalizations; there's evidence... Anthropologists and Psychologists have been trying to untangle conscience since before you were born.

Quote:
<strong>This has never been my experience. From an early age I have had the same moral code</strong>
I would be willing to bet such is not the case. Backward telescoping is a common problem dealing in interpreting recollections: we look back on our past actions (which we recall clearly enough) and we impose our current worldview upon those actions to reconstruct our intentions. I'm sure the differences would be subtle, and I'll conceed that you've likely always been more conservative than those around you, but not that your moral code has never changed.

Quote:
<strong>and it has always been different and more "traditional" or "conservative" or whatever word you want to use than that of my parents or childhood teachers and even that of the liberal Clergy I was raised with.</strong>
That much said...

Hey! Athiests! He's lambasting you for being assholes, and falling right into his trap. You're only making matters worse... what's your problem?

You've mocked him, insulted him... the next time something like Nedow v. California comes up, he'll be able to print out this thread, show it to all of his friends, and say "Why should we respect their rights? They don't respect ours..." Is that what you want?

Yes, that was a harangue worthy of St. Stephen, but in your response, you've made it into a worthy harangue.

Yes, you felt offended. I did too; I said as much. But there's a constructive, mature way to deal with that offense... and neither theists nor atheists have a monopoly on maturity.

Maybe he was being a troll, maybe his post was utter flamebait... but he's been here long enough, just by virtue of showing up, to be given the benefit of the doubt and maturely rebutted... that's why we're here, right?

And if you did join IIDB to be one of a thousand to shoot at the occasional duck in a barrel, you shot at the wrong guy... or didn't you check his posting record first? Didn't you see what else he's had to say. Yeah, he went off on a rant. Yeah, he threw down a few gauntlets... If you don't have anything constructive to add take your rotten cabbage and, go home... or at least go to another thread. Pick on someone your own size.
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Old 10-26-2002, 07:24 AM   #23
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P.S. Don't think I meant everybody who replied was being an ass; you should know who you are on whichever side of the line you sit.
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Old 10-26-2002, 09:57 AM   #24
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Geo,

I'm assuming (giving you the benefit of the doubt, really) that you are honest about having been an atheist for twenty-four hours, or at least trying not to believe in God.

Doesn't the continued existence of your moral code in that timeframe suggest to you that you don't need God to have a moral code?

If you think that morals and God are absolutely and utterly dependent on each other, then:

1) you should have felt immoral as an atheist

or

2) you still believed in God even during those twenty-four hours.

-Perchance.
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Old 10-26-2002, 10:05 AM   #25
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Warning! Your experiments could be dangerous. You better stop now or you might die in a car crash during that 24 hour experimental period and end up in hell or something. I don't think your god takes kindly to those kinds of experiments.

Did you repent when you were done with your experimenting for not having a belief in god during that 24 hour period?
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Old 10-26-2002, 10:20 AM   #26
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GeoTheo

Do you think it would be possible for an atheist to do what you did, in reverse, i.e. experiment with being a Christian for 24 hours?

I'm afraid, with all due respect, that your experiment rather trivializes the non-belief of people here, just as it would trivialize Christian faith, imo,were a non-Christian here to say "I experimented with being a Christian for 24 hours".

I think it takes more than 24 hours to get over worldview-lag, apart from anything else

To understand how the ex-Christians here feel, you'd have to enter into the sense of betrayal and wasted life, that they feel when they come to the conclusion that they've been taught lies for years and believed them. And then you'd have to be in situations where Christians came to all sorts of wrong conclusions based on your lack of belief. If you could do that, then you could start to see why they are angry...but a 24 hour thought experiment - I don't see how that could show you what life is like for them.

Helen
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Old 10-26-2002, 10:26 AM   #27
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How can one perceive the person until ones walks a mile in their moccasins. True emphathy is the beginning of understanding,

Be well, be wise and search for truth.
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Old 10-26-2002, 10:48 AM   #28
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Quote:
I think it takes more than 24 hours to get over worldview-lag, apart from anything else
<img src="graemlins/notworthy.gif" border="0" alt="[Not Worthy]" />
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Old 10-26-2002, 11:44 AM   #29
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Geotheo, try being an atheist for the next five years, then get back to us.
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Old 10-26-2002, 11:53 AM   #30
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Does this maybe get at a deeper routed misconception that many theists have about belief in religion? Many of my friends who are theists think that it is very much a "personal choice". I think theists are taught that whatever religion they belong to, whatever "worldview" they subscribe to, is a personal choice, and that in a way it doesn't really matter what other people (or reality!) say, because your belief in it makes it true.

In contrast, I don't think it's a personal choice at all. My beliefs in this area are the same as my beliefs in any other area (for the most part I hope), in that they are dependant on external reality! I don't believe what I want to believe, I believe what is rational to believe. And I think I speak for most, if not all, of the atheists on this board.

[ October 26, 2002: Message edited by: Devilnaut ]</p>
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