I recalled that atheism is far older than Christianity as described above. — VoidDetector
Why didn't humans stop at atheism? What went wrong? — VoidDetector
the good you know conditions your mind to make intellectual decisions, or to teach others to make intellectual decisions. — kill jepetto
Evil is technically minimalized. — kill jepetto
That's a tautology not explaining what intelligence is other than stating that it is intelligence. If you stated "intelligence is just intelligence" that would have been equally useful/useless.You are intelligent if you make more intelligent decisions than unintelligent decisions — kill jepetto
it's your diffusion of good, not mine — kill jepetto
people do have misunderstanding of good/people have misunderstanding of intelligence — kill jepetto
another inaccurate judgement could be that this person's IQ is intelligent, which there are no grounds for. — kill jepetto
Which genetical argument are you referring to? How do you determine which person deserves anything?genetics can be abused, some do not deserve who they are in person, but maybe in spirit. I don't think a genetical arguement suffices — kill jepetto
Any conversation that makes sense requires common ground to start from and refer to. Without sufficient common ground a conversation can't make any sense and will only lead to misunderstandings.it must be based on understanding, or mind of good. — kill jepetto
Sounds to me like you traveled about a year into the future, just like we all do. Travel into the future seems effortless. It's not doing it that's the trick. — noAxioms
Assuming time travel is to the past, as is typically assumed, it is impossible, period. A-theory has nothing to do with that. — noAxioms
High speed isn't required to do it. — noAxioms
and also recognise that God doesn’t communicate using words but through subjective experience — Possibility
I´m saying no book and no interpretation can be a communication from God. That we need to give up book idolatry for good. Gods do not write books; — DiegoT
What you say must be controversial though, otherwise it will simply be commonsense with which no one will dissgree. — Janus
The only thing I've encountered so far was your reframing of the principle of hermeneutics, and I dont think anyone sensible would disagree with the principle of hermeneutics. — Janus
Because your words were so profound, I didn't expect you to be a real person here and now. — Athena
So you'd say that either there's no creation of heaven and earth until humans, as a species, develop consciousness, or that there somehow keeps being no heaven and earth for each individual until they're about five years old? — Terrapin Station
2. Similarly, the point in time ’now’ cannot have length=0 (if it exists for 0 seconds, it does not exist) — Devans99
I beg your pardon, I thought the line commented was an actual quotation from a scholar I don´t know. That is why I wrote "this Tomseltje", not in a pejorative fashion, but recognizing my ignorance of this supposed author. Unless you have actually published essays, then it would all fall into place! — DiegoT
In what sense do you mean the beginning of consciousness? Do you mean once consciousness arose evolutionarily? Or something else? — Terrapin Station
But... you say "minimum requirements". What more can one do to determine the meaning that a divinity may or may not have expressed? — Bitter Crank
All those are minimum requirements in order to understand them in an even greater context like the devine. — Tomseltje
I said that it falls short (after writing that your guidelines was the correct scientific approach) because when you think that a text contains the real literal words and deeds of human beings and God, any approach is insufficient. — DiegoT
God is understood to be changeless, and therefore timeless, but God is also understood to be the creator of time.
If God creates the physical world along with time, then God experiences a change - from existing alone to existing along with time.
Can anyone explain how God is the creator of time and remains changeless? — Walter Pound
May your posts always find positive response (or at least interesting negative response). — Bitter Crank
We can always hope, and that hope does seem to be fulfilled at least some of the time...otherwise why would we bother? — Janus
There are people here who do not like biblical quotes. — Bitter Crank
Values are fluid like water: water moves and changes states and occupy different spaces, but it is always water. It has two atoms of Hydrogen and one Oxygen atom. — DiegoT
However, as far as interpreting religious books, even that approach might fall short — DiegoT
What are we looking to find in the scriptures. If it's the truth, then, amidst the many interpretations, which do you pick as truth? — BrianW
Sense? Disagreement? — tim wood
Re the last question, yes, although valuing things is subjective. — Terrapin Station
One thing I'd say I believe about the universe is this: it's big. — Terrapin Station
Otherwise I'd expect someone to respond to "what do you believe" with a question of their own--"what do I believe about what?" — Terrapin Station
1) my non-belief in your god, 2) the non-belief in any god, and 3) the non-acceptance of supernatural/non-natural beings or explanations. — tim wood
I agree, a scientist should at least believe in the science he/she practices. Additional believes are optional as long as they don't undermine the scientific method practiced by the scientist.In this sense no scientist worthy of the name is an atheist. — tim wood
If the context is clearly religion, then "I don't have any religious beliefs" would answer the question just fine, just like if someone were to say, "I don't play any sports." — Terrapin Station
I don't see why a pear list couldn't be an atheist. — Bitter Crank
Well said, so maybe the best approach is to think in terms of shared potential for subjective (feeling-based) transcendence. — macrosoft
It's conceivable that some varieties of 'personal' transcendence are less shared than others, and that art based on this might be less popular and yet no less effective for the smaller group sensitive to it. — macrosoft
how do you know that it has become something unconscious — jkg20
You are riding rough shod over numerous subtle distinctions and probably also misusing the word "ascertain". — jkg20
is indicative for you just having an uncomfortable feeling about it, by no means does it mean I was misusing the word. Though such feelings can be indicative for you not agreeing with what you think I meant by it, don't prematurely exclude the possibility that you just misunderstood me by going in offence mode.Then I can only advise you to read over the thread more carefully. — jkg20
How do you unconsciously find out where your fingers need to press the string? Does it involve looking at the score, does it involve looking at where your fingers are actually placed? If so, looking here is intentional, conscious activity — jkg20
I know that I am going to enjoy the cup of coffee steaming beside me. I certainly at some point in my life found out (ascertained) that I like coffee, but that's not what I am doing now: I'm just looking forward to drinking the coffee. — jkg20
How did you ascertain where your fingers needed to be on the fingerboard?
And consider in what circumstances that question would actually make sense when:
a) Asked of someone who is learning to play the guitar.
b) Asked of someone who has mastered the guitar. — jkg20
If talking about physical brain damage, then yes. But it's hard to not use the brain to such a level that your IQ drops so low that you almost simulate brain damage. — Christoffer
The optimal function of a person does not equal value of that person — Christoffer
Can intelligence be trained to increase? Or if not trained, fall? Yes, but studies show that only within a a small range around the baseline you exist under. The base IQ range level is pretty much set for each person. — Christoffer
Is there a lot of stigma around intelligence based on the fact, as the OP posted, that intelligence is talked about in the same way as money? People that do not have a lot of money often despise those who are rich, while those who are rich look down upon those who are poor. — Christoffer