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Are you pushing the "hyperbolic =" button on your philosophical calculator again?![]()
Not at all. Why? Where are you not following my logic?
Are you pushing the "hyperbolic =" button on your philosophical calculator again?![]()
But you may want to distinguish between the belief system "The tooth fairy does not exist" and the belief system of Christianity. It seems absurd to equate the two. At a minimum, it makes the label of "belief system" meaningless, since pretty much anything becomes a "belief system."
I put both beliefs into the belief system category. Being in the same category does not imply equivalence. It seems like hyperbole to suggest that being in the same category is the same as saying two things are equal.
IOW, if you want to define "belief system" so broadly as to include all non-beliefs, that's fine with me.
I don't define "belief system" to include all non-beliefs. My point is that every belief has either conscious or nonconscious cognitions and perceptual biases associated with it, and that alone constitutes a belief system.
Okay, but that still doesn't answer my question: What good is it?
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I don't see this discussion shedding much light on the atheism vs. religion debate, other than to rather tortuously redefine non-beliefs as "belief systems." But why bother? Does that label really change anything? Does it suddenly mean that the tooth fairy does exist after all?![]()
I look at various quotes in the Bible.
You did not chose me I have chosen you
I will not give you more than you can handle
I knew you before you were born, planned you and i know your life.
If lack of belief is the same as a belief system, then that means I have hundreds or thousands of belief systems. I don't believe in God, I don't believe in the tooth fairy, I don't believe in the Easter Bunny, I don't believe in elves, etc.
So according to you, each of those disbeliefs equals a belief system, equivalent to your own belief system in God? That doesn't say much for your own belief system.
To me they are just lack of belief. I don't tack any particular philosophy or qualifier onto my disbelief in God or any of my other disbeliefs. I simply don't believe in God and an afterlife the same way that I don't believe in the tooth fairy.
I'll grant that there are other atheists who do build some kind of philosophical superstructure on top of their atheism or qualify their atheism any number of ways.
But as it pertains to me, "atheism" isn't a school of thought or even a collection of people. It's just a label. Here's my thinking about that label:
"I don't believe in God the same way that I don't believe in the tooth fairy. According to the usual definition of these things, I guess that makes me an "atheist" Fine, whatever. If that's the appropriate label, then that's what I'll call myself so that people understand my position."
But it seems strange to hear that since I'm an "atheist," I must have a "belief system." I never understand why religious people claim that simple lack of belief in something is a "belief system." If I don't believe in ogres living in caves, is that a "belief system" too? And is non-belief in ogres on a par with your system of belief in God and in whatever religion you profess?
I think it is very relevant. I think categorizing something either as a truth or non-belief (Is there a difference?) allows us to ignore the cognitive processes and perceptual biases which lead us to our conclusion that something is truth (or non-belief). I don't understand how it is possible to do this and remain objective.
And, yes, the tooth fairy does exist! :steam:![]()
When I use philosophy at all, I would rather stick to the more useful, down-to-earth applications of philosophy. I don't think much gets accomplished at the grand meta-philosophical level.
Organism is spontaneous. Organization is the Church.Never believe in organization or never believe in organism?
If there is a god and that god is the one that is in the bible, then yes he would be truly sadistic. I could give you at least 20 reasons to support the fact that this god from the bible is sadistic but I only need to give one to prove my point.
If there is a god, and he truly knows everything, then he creates at least some people whose entire existence will be one of torture and never ending pain and torment. Those who will be damned to hell will be cast into an everlasting fire where they will be burned and tortured for all eternity.
So why would God create this person? If this God truly knew everything then he would know what would become of that poor soul before he ever gave it life. The only explanation for doing so would be that he is sadistic.
I would suggest that God does not know everything due to limits imposed on himself by allowing human free will. He is only aware of the infinite combinations of variables. He does not know if you will choose to eat Wheaties or Cheerios for breakfast, only that your previous breakfast history and current nutritional requirements indicate that you will mose likely choose Wheaties. The choice is yours.
19 more to go?![]()
So again, what good is the "category" at this point? Pretty much every human thought "has either conscious or nonconscious cognitions and perceptual biases associated with it," so I don't see a whole lot of value in highlighting that as a distinguishing or useful feature of the "category."
Ignoring the previous line of meta-airy-fairy discussion,how do you know your disbelief in God isn't a result of cognitive or perceptual bias in yourself? That seems like a very practical question.
If there is a god and that god is the one that is in the bible, then yes he would be truly sadistic. I could give you at least 20 reasons to support the fact that this god from the bible is sadistic but I only need to give one to prove my point.
If there is a god, and he truly knows everything, then he creates at least some people whose entire existence will be one of torture and never ending pain and torment. Those who will be damned to hell will be cast into an everlasting fire where they will be burned and tortured for all eternity.
So why would God create this person? If this God truly knew everything then he would know what would become of that poor soul before he ever gave it life. The only explanation for doing so would be that he is sadistic.
FYI, even accepting an absolutely biblical perspective, the idea of eternal torture is debatable. There are some (including myself) that view hell as more or less equivalent to death and not some kind of eternal torture.