Would you count the convictions that you know you hold as opinion or knowledge? — Moliere
My dogma is the stuff you have to already assent to to even make sense what I'm saying. The disbeliefs you have to suspend. — unenlightened
What's yours? — unenlightened
As William James says, "The ultimate test for us of what a truth means is the conduct it dictates or inspires."
This I would apply to the moral more than the mundane. I realize a bridge can be built only a certain way.
So even should a belief in God be entirely delusional, if it should lead to greater happiness, and should its disbelief lead to misery, you'd be hard pressed to explain why we should accept the cold hard scientific misery unless you hold that adherence to empirically motivated beliefs is always righteous. Such would be a basic tenant of your dogma. — Hanover
The question dealt with what harm there was from the good acts that resulted from the belief in god, and your response here is that it makes you sad. — Hanover
I have already stated what I think are the negative impacts of the religious aspect of the motivations of folks like MLK. There is no evidence that the source or main support of his motivation, exists. That harms everyone, as the truth matters.Other than that consequence, you need to describe the negative impact of their religious motivation. If there isn't one, then you have a pragmatic justification for a belief in God. — Hanover
On the contrary, it's very relevant indeed, as it demonstrates, no god required.It's entirely irrelevant whether one could have done the same thing without such a belief. What is relevant is that in those instances, that was that motivation. — Hanover
No, what you are left with is a person doing something for a wrong reason, not an absolutist definition of wrong. You are exaggerating again. Helping another human because that's what you think god wants you to do, is an inferior moral position imo, compared to helping another human because that's what you want to do, no god sanction required.If people do right for what you designate as the wrong reason, you are left with an absolutist definition of wrong, which suggests consequences are irrelevant, but that there is a over-riding principle that determines what is a right reason. — Hanover
This over-riding principle has already been identified in other posts, and it is what we are referencing as "atheistic dogma." That dogma holds that any belief not empirically justifiable is to be discarded, regardless of the utility it might have in bringing about good to the world or to the individual believer. — Hanover
What 'principle' are you assuming you have identified?If you don't feel you must give justification for this principle I have just identified, then that is the very definition of dogma. — Hanover
If you suggest that any use of non-empirically based justifications for beliefs will necessarily result in some negative consequence, you will have to show empirically what that it is. If you can't, you will be in violation of your own principle, and you will actually be invoking faith as your basis. — Hanover
Quote where I suggested that atheism or secular humanism is infallible!you are simply bowing down to your principle as infallible without proof. — Hanover
look, look, is that in an invisible hand? — Vera Mont
Your bad attempts to goad me are just that, bad attempts, but then you do use a two faced god as your representation image. Perhaps you are just trying to live up to that image. — universeness
Let's get this clear. If atheism is simply a lack of believe in God, then I am an atheist because I don't believe there is a God. The next step would be to believe that there is no God, and I don't take that step. I don't have a settled opinion on the matter. — Janus
There is also a range of anti-theism, which tends to depend on the subject's proximity to toxic, repressive and highly political centers, either currently or in their formative years. People who have experienced more pain, humiliation, discrimination and social rejection on the basis of their lack of faith do tend to be more strongly outspoken against the religion which subjected them to those experiences - though they are often more lenient toward exotic religions in other parts of the world. That's not dogma: it's not dictated to them by an authority: that is anger and sometime bitterness.was aiming at in creating this thread was anti-theism, and that is dogma, just as much as theism is, — Janus
No, it's far more often derision or contempt of what other do believe - or hypocritically claim to believe but do not act if they believed. And it is a political stance, because the issues in which they were/are the victims are politically enacted.taking both as political stances; as claims as to what others should believe. — Janus
The social divisions are deep and long-standing; they were here long before any of us. And they are not open to "solution" when the oppressor doesn't merely refuse to yield an inch, but is presently, relentlessly, tightening its stranglehold. https://www.aclu.org/legislative-attacks-on-lgbtq-rightsThis kind of theistic or ant-theistic dogmatism from either side is socially divisive, — Janus
To put it plainly, an anti-theocracy is as bad as a theocracy. — Janus
I think what unenlightened (he can correct me if I am getting this wrong) was aiming at in creating this thread was anti-theism, and that is dogma, just as much as theism is, taking both as political stances; as claims as to what others should believe. This kind of theistic or ant-theistic dogmatism from either side is socially divisive, and is part of the problem, not part of a solution. To put it plainly, an anti-theocracy is as bad as a theocracy. — Janus
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/811827It was all laid out in the op and not a word has been said against it that I have seen. — unenlightened
No. Not my argument at all. I have said more than once, that I am not even interested in who the good guys are. — unenlightened
People who have experienced more pain, humiliation, discrimination and social rejection on the basis of their lack of faith do tend to be more strongly outspoken against the religion which subjected them to those experiences — Vera Mont
No, it's far more often derision or contempt of what other do believe - or hypocritically claim to believe but do not act if they believed. And it is a political stance, because the issues in which they were/are the victims are politically enacted. — Vera Mont
The social divisions are deep and long-standing; they were here long before any of us. And they are not open to "solution" when the oppressor doesn't merely refuse to yield an inch, but is presently, relentlessly, tightening its stranglehold. https://www.aclu.org/legislative-attacks-on-lgbtq-rights — Vera Mont
To put it plainly, an anti-theocracy is as bad as a theocracy.
— Janus
I really don't think that's either currently nor historically accurate. (FFS, don't go down the Stalin-hole!) — Vera Mont
I think all of the frustration is coming from your words, not mine. You only offer pantomime style responses, you offer no supporting evidence or examples or valid counter arguments.Yes, I was trying to goad you, though not to defensiveness or anger but to attempt to make an actual argument and come up with some actual facts instead of continuing to present mere assertions. Apparently, you can't do that, so the rational thing to do would be to admit that, let go of your baseless and ugly fanaticism and take a more reasonable and humane approach; but that will take some humility...and resorting to defensive ad hominems won't help you get there. — Janus
I mean in your OP you explicitly state that atheist dogma created fundamentalism; are you now backing away from that? — Janus
To put it plainly, an anti-theocracy, as I intended the term, would be one which banned religion altogether. Would you want that? — Janus
My moral position is that this is a 'good thing', because rationality becomes robotic and dehumanising, because human nature, and the nature of all living things is to care about things,and caring is not rational. — unenlightened
False equivalence (like anti-fascism "is as bad as" fascism ... anti-sexism "is as bad as" sexism...) :roll:
8 hours ago — 180 Proof
or more precisely the belief that there is a correct interpretation, which is the incorrect interpretation. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think this evasion or deflection happens in science just as it does in religion. — Janus
I'll take that change of subject as your concession of my point. — 180 Proof
I think that it's valid to state that it does not definitively follow, that anti-theism is as bad as theism. — universeness
I was just making a mild joke — Tom Storm
I tend towards anti-foundationalist skepticism myself. — Tom Storm
Maybe that's the better route towards understanding dogmatism critically. — Moliere
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