1051. Christopher Hitchens at AAI 07
Comment #80349 by phil rimmer on October 21, 2007 at 11:59 am
They reject God because they want to be God.
1052. The greatest debate
Comment #80344 by phil rimmer on October 21, 2007 at 11:47 am
I will leave Spong in perfect peace if only he would stand up and say-
"Belief is a wholly insufficient reason to decide on the organization of society and its rules of governance."
Were he to believe and proclaim the deep morality of that, I would be truly happy.
1053. Christopher Hitchens at AAI 07
Comment #80335 by phil rimmer on October 21, 2007 at 11:15 am
Riley
So Hitchens has not derided good answers? (We both agree on the feeble merits of the answers you quote? Re prayer- I introspect endlessly on my actions and my beliefs hoping to do better. Re forgiving enemies- I strive continually to do so and have been rewarded handsomely for it.)
1054. Christopher Hitchens at AAI 07
Comment #80327 by phil rimmer on October 21, 2007 at 10:57 am
artemisa
Free Will: the explanation that when I choose to act in one way rather than another I make the choice, and no set of external or internal causes cause me to choose the act I choose.
1055. Christopher Hitchens at AAI 07
Comment #80320 by phil rimmer on October 21, 2007 at 10:30 am
Riley,
1) Why would any theist admit to being "Holier than Thou"? Why would they put this issue on the table? Arguing that religion makes you nicer and more sociable is one thing but... This question is an accusation that can only come from an atheist.
2)Hitchens would deride a sensible answer?? Then he must leave in disgrace! Has he done this?
3)But you already provided a good response with your fantasy Sharpton.
4)He mocks theists in general for not taking up the challenge.
If theists don't challenge him then why don't you? It can only reflect well on atheism to do so, whatever the outcome.
1056. Christopher Hitchens at AAI 07
Comment #80312 by phil rimmer on October 21, 2007 at 9:38 am
Granted this could be the first step toward completing an argument that I am unaware of, but even if that were the case, how would that justify publicly grandstanding and admonishing his targets for not responding to his challenge? His challenge is used as part of a theatre that makes it appear as though he is actually addressing a real theist position - he's not. Has no one else on this thread had the opportunity to listen to a cult-of-personality theist pull this same tactic with his own devoted followers? And have none of you ever felt sick watching those followers eat it up uncritically --- he's telling you what you want to hear.
1057. Christopher Hitchens at AAI 07
Comment #80286 by phil rimmer on October 21, 2007 at 6:23 am
It is rather chaotic behaviour (epeeist's point) more than randomness that defeats determinism. Simply, the complexity of loosely coupled systems (society, most of the universe etc.)derives from the extreme sensitivity to the "start" conditions.
The universe itself is the most elegant computer that can be conceived for determining its own future. Sadly its clock speed cannot be increased so we can get a sneak preview..
The evolutionary drive underpinning the phenomenon of free will is I suspect entirely societal. We gain advantage from being able to wrong-foot our enemies and our competitors. Our future actions must, where necessary, be unpredictable to others yet not be a complete surprise to us. Imagining the future and rehearsing our possible actions is the core of free will (also that these details are not available to outsiders). Free will is not spontaneous random action, which has no value whatsoever. Free will results in directed, purposeful action (mostly)and must, therefore, be rooted in pre-existing brain states. (There is no other place for information to reside.)
This chaotic behaviour is both specifically unpredictable and generally predictable, the latter because of the pattern forming potential of chaotic systems. (Humans tend to do this...republicans tend to do that etc.)
Free will's elevated status is a cultural artifact. (Memetic) Simply, reifying it and discussing it, encourages us to use the processes it entails and become more adept at it.
Free will in no practical sense whatever is susceptible to determinism (Steve99's point).
Its fascinating to think that human brains have perhaps become the most concentrated nodes of chaotic behaviour in our neck of the universe.
1058. Christopher Hitchens at AAI 07
Comment #80266 by phil rimmer on October 21, 2007 at 3:37 am
Comment #80238 by keith
Exactly!
Further, the plea that the argument should be about QUANTITY of goodness, not the "degree" of goodness of any single act, is to get things out of order. Only by blocking off the possibility of a category of acts denied to atheists can you go on to argue any case regarding quantity or net contribution.
"Saintliness" is popularly regarded as just such a restricted category. Hitchens, the Devil's Advocate in the case for Mother Teresa's beatification and canonization, is exactly the person to nail this one.
1059. Christopher Hitchens at AAI 07
Comment #80207 by phil rimmer on October 20, 2007 at 6:24 pm
Riley
Here is a quote from another thread by one of the nicest, most informed, moderate, modern Christians you could wish to meet.
I don't know if you've seen a program called House. I can really recommend it. It shows, as I see it, what a rational approach to human behaviour would be without believing in God. House is an atheist, doesn't believe in the existence of objective morality, so he does whatever works out best for himself.
1060. Christopher Hitchens at AAI 07
Comment #80115 by phil rimmer on October 20, 2007 at 4:14 am
Hitchens, I don't believe, has EVER stated that Christians CLAIM to be motivated to moral acts that an atheist will never be inclined to do. He never phrases it in that way. He merely poses a question.
Any reply, including Riley's, would be equally welcome to him. I suspect he would happily acknowledge the modest and self-effacing claims of modern, moderate theism, but delight in demonstrating the wealth of implicit theistic material demonstrating moral elevation and theists tacit acceptance of this "blessing".
There is no hypocrisy in posing the question. It is a baited hook Christians wisely swim clear of. Its a rhetorical device that subverts the "So, where do you atheists get your morals from?" question.
Arguments about the QUANTITY of moral behaviour are quite another issue. Hitchens, here, wants to say not merely that humans can be good without God, but that humans can be "Saintly" without God.
1061. Richard Dawkins and Alister McGrath
Comment #79975 by phil rimmer on October 19, 2007 at 10:58 am
Spooky, Dr B.
Spent an hour dithering over this only to discover you'd said it neater, sooner....
PaulEmecz
House is the sociopath mankind needs at moments of great crisis. His moral calculus is unarguable but not for the squeamish. His greatest-good-at-all-times test requires a sacrifice, not least from him. That he has the common human decency to be suffering, licenses his godly, indecent acts of salvation. But the moment his suffering ends, we'll nail him good for his presumption. Just remember he will have died for us.
1062. Sam Harris seems like a nice fellow, but very confused
Comment #77987 by phil rimmer on October 11, 2007 at 12:16 pm
Chris
...I do KNOW the truth.
1063. Why Christians should take Richard Dawkins seriously
Comment #77971 by phil rimmer on October 11, 2007 at 11:12 am
Steve99
I am wondering if it might be useful to have on this site somewhere some standard rebuttals which can be referred to, rather than having to look through thousands of posts in a number of threads to refer to an argument that has been had before.
I have no idea how it work work, but I believe it would be so useful to have, for example, some of epeeist's logic, and Benway's points about naturalism and so on...
1064. Sam Harris seems like a nice fellow, but very confused
Comment #77968 by phil rimmer on October 11, 2007 at 10:59 am
Chris
The "evil of certainty" is no evil at all when true.
"almost certainly fictional". Sorry, that is not good enough.
If the truth hurts, too bad.
1065. Sam Harris seems like a nice fellow, but very confused
Comment #77917 by phil rimmer on October 11, 2007 at 5:37 am
CDGI
almost certainly fictional"?????!!!!! What is up with that? Almost?
1066. Sam Harris seems like a nice fellow, but very confused
Comment #77914 by phil rimmer on October 11, 2007 at 5:19 am
Janus
It's like putting a sticker that says "Apple" on an apple.
1067. Sam Harris seems like a nice fellow, but very confused
Comment #77805 by phil rimmer on October 10, 2007 at 4:16 pm
Richard Morgan.
How sad that we need to feel angry, don't you think?
1068. Sam Harris seems like a nice fellow, but very confused
Comment #77671 by phil rimmer on October 10, 2007 at 4:53 am
Dr B
Brains play tricks on people. You'd be surprised to learn how many people hear voices but otherwise appear normal.
1069. Sam Harris seems like a nice fellow, but very confused
Comment #77527 by phil rimmer on October 9, 2007 at 2:16 pm
PZ and Sam are both right some of the time. The self-identifiers you use for yourself should depend on context and audience.
With fundies I never usually identify myself as an atheist. As Dr Benway suggested for himself a while ago, I would be happy to call myself a Deist just to skip unproductive discussions . The key issues to be debated with them are whence comes knowledge, and the hatefulness of dogma, leading to the injunction to keep all that shit to themselves. A fundie would expect an atheist to be mainly concerned with the "Big" question of the existence of god, but a fundie would be the last person able to say anything useful on that particular subject. That a belief in god is not on the table allows one to pose the question, who's dogma wins in the social arena, and then move on to the value of rational debate based on evidence and experience.
With moderates I am an Atheist. The key issue to be discussed with them is the error of the "Virtue of Faith" and the need for moderates to proclaim that Faith can only be a personal attribute (never a social one) and may very well be devoid of any meaning to others. Being an Atheist puts the moderate in the opposing camp, along with the fundies. It says you're religious just like them, which annoys the hell out of them. (" All religions aren't the same! Only their religion is crap, not mine! Mine is gentle and full of Love and Niceness.") But, in that camp they must stay until they denounce publicly (for all the fundies to hear) the "Virtue of Faith".
1070. Dawkins - what can't he be blamed for?
Comment #75396 by phil rimmer on October 2, 2007 at 2:02 pm
Karen Armstrong propounds the theory of the "Axial Age" first mooted by philosopher Karl Jaspers. This holds that there was a global shift in human thinking in the period 800BCE to 200BCE. This shift (in brief) was the "discovery" of the Golden Rule. This happened independently across the Globe and involved the likes of Socrates, Confucius, Siddhartha Gautama and sundry figures from the Torah. It was later co-opted by Christianity and Islam.
Karen Armstrong is fervent in her belief of the importance of this thinking, and is persuaded that this may have been a means by which (at least spokesmen for) the common people might seek to mitigate the harms wrought by tyrant rulers.
Perhaps her undoing is her belief that a return to these roots will re-nourish society. (It certainly makes her personal journey less of a waste..) Strangely, however, when faced with fact that only a few years after the "gentle" Muhammad's life Arab armies subsume much of the eastern and southern Mediterranean, she responds that this is because Islam has fallen into the hands of politicians....
Exactly! She completely fails to see the built in dangers when philosophy is interlarded with dogmatic detail, to make it a juicier story. So in love is she with this "First Enlightenment" that she prefers to see a dagger aimed at its heart rather than its internal flaw.
1071. Dawkins - what can't he be blamed for?
Comment #75367 by phil rimmer on October 2, 2007 at 12:05 pm
As ever you've nailed it, Dr. B. (Comment #33)
First step is to get moderates to accept there is such a thing as "Religious Power". And there is no "Atheist Power", just an insistence on the question, "Why?"
1072. Dawkins - what can't he be blamed for?
Comment #75362 by phil rimmer on October 2, 2007 at 11:57 am
I was greatly interested in what Karen Armstrong had to say on the radio and was quite shocked at her stupid throw-away comment at the end of her section of the program.
I for one would like her here to debate what she intended by her remark. I can only imagine she hasn't grasped what Dawkins is about, to whit, "No social imperatives from un-evidenced beliefs," and "moderates to publicly endorse same."
With her book she has done sterling work with the latter (or so it seems from the program).
I wonder if there is any formal way we could invite her here? Maybe have a place on the site to vote for people to be given a formal invite from Josh in Richard's name or some such?
She shouldn't feel out of place in the company of CHeard, Paul Emecz and the like, and we must get to grips with this curious problem of moderates.
1073. The Dawkins debate
Comment #70668 by phil rimmer on September 16, 2007 at 2:20 pm
Prufrock
they believe because they can't be bothered not to
1074. A Response to Jonathan Haidt
Comment #70141 by phil rimmer on September 14, 2007 at 7:49 am
Dianelos,
I am astonished that you think you have refuted Dawkins' claim related to the difference between science and the fundamentalism in the Times article you link to.
That scientists may fail to change their minds in the face of valid opposing evidence and the fundamentalist may lose his faith through the power of reason, says nothing about science and fundamentalism per se. It signals only that people may be foolish or wise.
But are the foolish and the wise equally served by fundamentalism and science? On the side of the fundamentalism tin it reads, "Only have faith." On the other "Doubt everything".
Its what it says on the tin that is the issue.
(Dawkins, incidentally, spoke only of the "True scientist". He knows too well that folly abounds.)
1075. Richard Dawkins and Alister McGrath
Comment #69864 by phil rimmer on September 13, 2007 at 3:09 am
but who respects Greer's thoughts? I don't.
1076. Richard Dawkins and Alister McGrath
Comment #69776 by phil rimmer on September 12, 2007 at 5:47 pm
I have always said, you can claim that morals are just subjective
1077. Richard Dawkins and Alister McGrath
Comment #69284 by phil rimmer on September 10, 2007 at 10:00 am
Dr B
And you've begged and begged.
Steve99
Fair enough. I just wondered if a relaxation of the manufacturing tolerances in the design spec. could loosen things up a bit. You know, accumulating complexity will yield smart enough life one day. Picking the values of the various constants might get a little easier, particularly after you've had a couple of "ranging shots".
You know, I've always worried about the possibility of us being one of those "ranging shots".
1078. Richard Dawkins and Alister McGrath
Comment #69256 by phil rimmer on September 10, 2007 at 7:47 am
Dr.B
Evil for questioning whether God's purposes ought to be my own?
1079. Richard Dawkins and Alister McGrath
Comment #69218 by phil rimmer on September 10, 2007 at 3:25 am
Corylus, Veronique, Pewkachoo
Don't distract him now! We need to know if Dr.B is Truly Evil and if not then....
Steve99
I accept your arguments re. designing us from a big bang, but let me give give Paul a get-out for the mo. so he can answer Dr.B's Question.
So...(Metaphorically) God planted some Complexity seeds. The particular forms that would result were unknown and broadly irrelevant, but some broad characteristics (the critical ones) could be inferred from reading the side of the packet. If Paul accepts this can we move on?
1080. Richard Dawkins and Alister McGrath
Comment #69201 by phil rimmer on September 10, 2007 at 2:02 am
Apologies for my clunking entry earlier, I hadn't realized the argument had reached such an exquisite tipping point.
Dr B's question, I see, is THE question. Paul must answer. And not with the "designed for a purpose" response. There are things you must then go on to say about Dr B's refusal to accept his role, about God's possible response or non response, what this makes Dr.B and what this says about God. No leaving gaps now!
(Chaps, I hope I haven't just clunked.)
1081. Richard Dawkins and Alister McGrath
Comment #69025 by phil rimmer on September 9, 2007 at 2:22 pm
PaulE
…when we discover moral laws by reason, and follow what reason dictates, we are acting as God intended. Clearly you can act that way without believing in God, but if you don't believe in God, how do you answer the question "Why should you act that way?"
The idea that God determines morality is dangerous.
1082. Like any half-decent atheist, I'm fond of a bit of religion
Comment #67865 by phil rimmer on September 5, 2007 at 3:27 am
Yet never in our history has that influence been so weak, its doctrines so torn by doubt, its preaching so uncertain.
1083. In God we doubt
Comment #67460 by phil rimmer on September 3, 2007 at 1:55 pm
NorthernBright
if people reject atheism because they're SCARED of it, rather than because they're not convinced by its arguments, how DO we get the message across?
1084. The Flea Circus moves to your iPod!
Comment #67448 by phil rimmer on September 3, 2007 at 1:22 pm
No need for an iPod, Quork. Your PC will play the files perfectly well.
Thanks for volunteering :)
1085. The New Atheists
Comment #67443 by phil rimmer on September 3, 2007 at 1:04 pm
Those that call for a dialog between moderate deists and atheists forget that it is moderate faith that is the incubus of extremism.
1086. Review of Darwin's Angel: An Angelic Response to the God Delusion
Comment #67214 by phil rimmer on September 2, 2007 at 5:03 pm
For Salley (with an e)
Salley fears the Thought Police
a-knocking at her door,
Fears old Ray's Firemen piling
all her books up by the score.
Like Chicken Little wailing,
"My Heaven's falling in."
She blocks her ears,
And screams her fears,
"My Dreams are not a sin!"
Nor are they, gentle Willow,
a-weeping o'er Life's stream.
Would that more were visited
and had such strength to dream.
But, sadly, some such dreamers
believe their dreams are true.
They know they're right
And so they'll fight
Until you know that too!
1087. Fallen Pastor Seeks Aid to Pursue Studies
Comment #67071 by phil rimmer on September 1, 2007 at 5:03 pm
Ted Haggard it seems tried "to reach out to the gay community" but his efforts didn't go down well with his own flock (sic). I think there may have been the glimmer of something decent in him then, but, he learned to toe the line and condemn homosexuality. (Some leaders lead by running just in front of the mob, whilst looking over their shoulders to see which way it'll turn next.)
Now I can see his rictus of a smile as one of self-loathing, that of a man trapped in a hypocritical hell of his own making. Its sad. Its a bit like Mother Theresa, trapped by Dogma.
So, I missed out my first effort, a limerick, as too filthy and settled for this....
Revealed as bi-curious,
His flock, somewhat furious,
Disowned him and sent him away.
He begged for their kindness,
For money, not blindness.
They jeered, "No way, f*gg*t, your gay.
What can you be thinking?
We know its not drinking.
The Meth must have addled your mind.
Get up off your knees. You
Appealing to Jesu,
Like that will condemn all your kind."
Such condemnation isn't new. Swinburne wrote on the death of Oscar Wilde....
"...It was for sinners such as this,
Hell was created bottomless."
(Christian hypocrite that he was, Swinburne liked to turn the other cheek when a little strict discipline was on offer. My mistake. That merely puts him on a par with Opus Dei members.)
1088. Review of Darwin's Angel: An Angelic Response to the God Delusion
Comment #66974 by phil rimmer on September 1, 2007 at 6:34 am
..so lets leave her alone and let her go back to playing with her dolls...
1089. Open letter to Michael Shermer in response to his letter...
Comment #65300 by phil rimmer on August 23, 2007 at 2:08 pm
Dr B.
I think the Hitch is right. The only slogan to have is
"...Build up that wall."
1090. Rational Atheism
Comment #65045 by phil rimmer on August 22, 2007 at 5:57 pm
Dr.B.
When I first starting coming to this site, I said more frequently that I view myself as a secularist more than an atheist. Secularism is really a higher goal, as it supports a diversity of first person data, so long as all personal data bend the knee to our collective need for corroborative evidence.
1091. CNN Request for 'I-Reports' on religion
Comment #65028 by phil rimmer on August 22, 2007 at 5:01 pm
Maybe I just spoiled my ballot paper, I don't know.
I got this view of them churning through our responses saying, "Yeah, yeah, yeah. Atheist. Atheist. Anabaptist. Christadelphian..."
So I wrote-
"Private Faith. Public cynicism. I am measured by my deeds not my beliefs. Public discourse, the workings of society, can proceed only on the common substrate of rational, cynical debate. Only this way are all included on an equal footing.
The details of my Faith should not be a matter for anyone but me. People (especially the media) lazily use a person's faith as a litmus test of their moral character. This is crass in the extreme. Keep out of it."
1092. Scientists should unite against threat from religion
Comment #65014 by phil rimmer on August 22, 2007 at 4:14 pm
I bought Collin's book in an airport recently, to entertain me on the trip. It failed. But it entertained my fellow travelers as I threw it down in disgust every few pages.
Woefully, intellectually underpowered. The good bits were all C.S.Lewis quoted verbatim. His one chance of doing good by this hero of his was to explain how the latest science hadn't screwed up a lot of Lewis's ideas. He flunked out, badly. A man of very little breadth I fear...
1093. Scientists should unite against threat from religion
Comment #65007 by phil rimmer on August 22, 2007 at 4:01 pm
"Do not use when pissed!"
1094. Enemies of Reason
Comment #65004 by phil rimmer on August 22, 2007 at 3:45 pm
How does he keep such a straight face!?
I can only imagine the makeup person dashes in before the take to whack a shot of novocaine into each cheek.....
1095. Richard Dawkins and Alister McGrath
Comment #64956 by phil rimmer on August 22, 2007 at 1:41 pm
Am I right here in assessing Paul's concern essentially as being that a society, morally sustained by empathy and the Golden Rule (and not by a divine moral framework),would be unstable, and prone to exploitation and ultimate destruction by the selfish and the sociopaths?
Anybody? Paul?
1096. The Politics of God
Comment #64735 by phil rimmer on August 21, 2007 at 2:06 pm
Astonishingly good. Depressing. Galvanizing. I learned more useful stuff in the last twenty minutes than...well..any other.
"All we have is our own lucidity, which we must train on a world where faith still inflames the minds of men."
1097. Interview with Richard Dawkins
Comment #64726 by phil rimmer on August 21, 2007 at 1:21 pm
[edit]
Please, now can we put this thread down and walk away slowly, before someone gets hurt?
1098. Interview with Richard Dawkins
Comment #64723 by phil rimmer on August 21, 2007 at 1:17 pm
What!!!!
1099. God's Still Dead
Comment #64720 by phil rimmer on August 21, 2007 at 12:53 pm
This article is rich stuff indeed. Its sent me off to read more of Lilla and thence to Isaiah Berlin. Professor Lilla, though thankfully not a post-modernist, (he seems to have trashed Derrida for deconstructing both baby and bathwater when tackling the issue of justice) is nevertheless infected by some of the same thinking.
What is it about people trained in the twentieth century in the social sciences and the Humanities? They all believe "we are what we are what we are" and we'd better not meddle with it.
We evolved to be racists, but we're dealing with it.
1100. God's Still Dead
Comment #64712 by phil rimmer on August 21, 2007 at 12:30 pm
Riley,
For Hitch I'd like to see him use the term- Sacred Dogma
For RD I'd prefer- Supernatural Religion.
the terms dogma and religion being a little too general on their own.