Atheism" : only nature : — 180 Proof
And that's love. Giving away everything your inner rational egotist has acquired. — ucarr
You had to mention Ayn Rand. When she's mentioned, I'm obliged to repeat that Ayn Rand is to philosophy what L. Ron Hubbard is to religion. — Ciceronianus
In self-help groups I've frequented, there's common talk about learning to love oneself as a remedy to paralyzing insecurities, debilitating anxiety and self-destructive behavior. — ucarr
So, what's a handy crux of outrageous otherness? God. God puts a face on our unimaginably strange universe, which is to say, our God consciousness boils down the unmanageable universe to something digestible. — ucarr
And that's love. Giving away everything your inner rational egotist has acquired. — ucarr
But this view is controverted by experience. The love amongst family and friends is not a zero-sum game. My child will not benefit from demonstrations of sacrifice. The freely given benefits me as well as him. — Paine
My child will not benefit from demonstrations of sacrifice. — Paine
I have serious doubts about our ability to love ourselves. In our particular universe — ucarr
When the sentient being inhabits the universe of self, don't we call this solipsism? — ucarr
Otherwise, self-love is a nasty trek through delusional narcisscism. — ucarr
So then, the crux of adventure is flinging oneself into the gaping maw of the unknown, which is to say, the embrace of otherness. Well, as we've seen in Sigourney Weaver's sci-fi adventure Alien, the leap of faith sometimes ends badly. — ucarr
then I am more inclined to agree.Falling in love with the other, — ucarr
Are they first cousins, or even siblings? — ucarr
Consider Citizen Kane. Charles Foster Kane, a happy boy playing outside in the snow with Rosebud, his sled, learns that his completely insane mother, trading him in for money, has packed him off to New York under proprietorship of Walter Parks Thatcher, a banker.
This is "parenting" without self-sacrifice. — ucarr
think the problem here starts with that love label. It's such an umbrella term. — universeness
So solipsism can be seen as a mother or father of atheism. Atheism, consequently, is then the child. — Raymond
Only by killing the pagan father and the solipsist brother the theist son can, happily undisturbed, rape his pagan solipsist mother to make her truly realize he and God actually exist. — Raymond
There's no indication the mother is insane in the film. Also, she already had money, and clearly wasn't trading him in to obtain more. Thatcher was a hired man. I thought the scene made it apparent that Charles was being sent away because the mother feared what the father (or step-father, perhaps) would do to him. — Ciceronianus
When the sentient being inhabits the universe of self, don't we call this solipsism? — ucarr
In self-help groups I've frequented, there's common talk about learning to love oneself as a remedy to paralyzing insecurities, debilitating anxiety and self-destructive behavior.
I have serious doubts about our ability to love ourselves. In our particular universe, I suspect we're disbarred from expressing and experiencing love as a reflexive action. As reflexive actions, we can care, trust and esteem ourselves, but no, we can't love ourselves. — ucarr
Charlie pushes Thatcher into the snow, using Rosebud. Father takes a swing at Charlie, but misses. Then--
Father: "Sorry, Mr. Thatcher. What that kid needs is a good thrashing!"
Mother: "Is that what you think, Jim?"
Father: "Yes"
Mother: "That's why he's going to be brought up where you can't get at him." — Ciceronianus
The link I see between solipsism and atheism is this:
In theism, knowledge of "how things really are" is received from others, and, presumably, originates with God. It's a top-down process. Someone else tells you "how things really are", you don't figure it out by yourself.
In atheism, no such higher authority is envisioned or made room for, man is left alone with his senses and his mind and whatever he can achieve with those. He believes it's up to him and him alone to figure things out. This way, atheism implies at least epistemic solipsism. — baker
There's an old word for this "self-love": pride. But it's out of favor by now, it's not politically correct (although things seem to be looking up for it lately.) — baker
I can't preclude the possibility Mary Kane is internally pressurized to relinquish custody of Charlie due to a greedy desire for great wealth. — ucarr
Atheism →→ Solipsism →→ Theism — Agent Smith
Atheism →→ Solipsism →→ Theism — Agent Smith
Atheism →→ Solipsism →→ Theism — Agent Smith
So your logic goes something like:
I do not believe in the existence of any god(s)............> I have no evidence that anything outside of me, exists..............> I do believe in the existence of god(s) — universeness
Where is the paradox? This is merely a 'belief' challenged by solipsism that you posit is strong enough evidence for flipping 'belief in god' from no to yes. That is not a description of a paradox. — universeness
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