Author Topic: Antitheism  (Read 31635 times)

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #125 on: May 17, 2016, 09:40:33 PM »
NS,

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But you are actively antitheist because you must think it's not beneficial. What is your evidence that were we not that inclined to religion we, as a species would be better off? What does the concept of 'better off' mean here?

Yes, but I make no appeal to a supposedly absolute standard for "good" that I happen to have tapped into, and nor for that matter do I claim that no religion would be the evolutionarily optimum outcome.

"Best" here means for me something like, "causing least harm" - something I intuit and can to some extent at least reason my way towards. Provided I make no claim to a spurious benchmark of objective rightness, that's good enough for me to be an antitheist because - on balance - it seems to me that religion does more harm than good.
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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #126 on: May 17, 2016, 09:46:15 PM »
NS,

Yes, but I make no appeal to a supposedly absolute standard for "good" that I happen to have tapped into, and nor for that matter do I claim that no religion would be the evolutionarily optimum outcome.

"Best" here means for me something like, "causing least harm" - something I intuit and can to some extent at least reason my way towards. Provided I make no claim to a spurious benchmark of objective rightness, that's good enough for me to be an antitheist because - on balance - it seems to me that religion does more harm than good.

In part because you cherry pick and assume that it causes what you see as bad and has no rule in what's good because you assert that one thing is inherent, and one thing isn't. And how anything that we do given you're an atheist is not inherent baffles me

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #127 on: May 17, 2016, 10:01:10 PM »
NS,

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but surely your starting position is determined? Your belief in you being persuadable is no more chosen actively than any other belief. It's an outcome.

Yes, though perhaps that was because of my environment and upbringing - my parents taught me to be persuadable, and they only thought so because they in turn... etc etc.  Determined or not though, it's just a starting condition - whether I ever encounter something that's persuasive enough for me to change my mind is unknowable. And that's all this is about - to the extent that people (usually children) are persuadable, does persuading them that faith is a better guide to truth than just guessing do more harm than good? And if you think it's the latter (as I do) then antitheism will tend to follow (as it has for me). 

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But he did that by putting them in a situation where it was in their nature to obey. Just as it was in his nature to experiment. His instruction isn't beamed down any more than god's or Stalin's.

There's no "but" about it - it's not relevant. The fact is that he was able to enable, activate, whatever behaviour that would otherwise have occurred, and that's the beginning and end of it.

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And note given the Stanford prison experiment, you don't have to be instructed to behave badly to do so, if the situation is something that we might behave so inherently.

No you don't have to be instructed to behave badly, and I've suggested no such thing. It's simpler than that though: the premise is that we are inherently altruistic, and so it needs something else that's causal of behaviour that's other than that - doesn't matter much for this purpose whether it's prison, Milgram's experiment or religion.
« Last Edit: May 17, 2016, 10:12:44 PM by bluehillside »
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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #128 on: May 17, 2016, 10:17:43 PM »
But not to act in ways that are not determined or random. We will do what we will do. Actions play a part but they are determined as well, at least by your position on this.

"We will do what we will do" is a truism that has nothing to do with determinism. We will do what we decide to do. Yes, you can point out that every decision is the result of a massively complex chain of causality but that does not detract from it being a decision. In fact, as I pointed out before, that is the only way our decisions can be 'free' in the sense of being the genuine result of who we are; of our character, experience, knowledge, emotions and intellect.

in any objective sense, not at all, and I suspect that is what you are getting hung up about the point is there is no wrongness, or external influence here. As an atheist, there isn't something influencing evolution.

But we have evolved an ability to assign the terms "mistaken", "correct", "helpful", "desirable" and so on. There is no need for any external influence. We probably won't all agree about many things but we all have these concepts and we can discuss, reason, and argue about them.

Theism though is not a moral position. It isn't arguing for a specific action or consequence.

Often theism gives rise to moral positions. Anyway, more to the point, in what way does that make a difference? If you think it does, then theism would be a closer match to believing the Earth to be flat (something we are intuitively drawn to but nevertheless incorrect).
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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #129 on: May 17, 2016, 10:27:07 PM »
NS,

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In part because you cherry pick and assume that it causes what you see as bad and has no rule in what's good because you assert that one thing is inherent, and one thing isn't. And how anything that we do given you're an atheist is not inherent baffles me

I'll need to unpack that:

First, I don’t just assert that altruism is inherent. It’s been studied exhaustively in nature, from humans to elephants to dolphins to vampire bats to social insects. Bill Hamilton is the best known biologist in this field, and he showed how it makes perfect evolutionary sense by optimising flourishing at the genomic level.

Second, I make no claim that religion has no part in what’s good. To the contrary, I don’t doubt that sometimes some people do good things when they otherwise would not precisely because of their religious beliefs. The premise though is in two parts: first, “faith” is no more a reliable guide to truth than just guessing; second, just guessing will manifestly lead to more wrong answers than it will to right ones. I “cherry pick” only to the extent that I follow that logic to its conclusion.

Third, you’re straying dangerously close to Trollboy idiocy here – morality must be “real” or it’s “arse pull”, “real” means absolute, therefore god. I merely say that my determination of “good” and “bad” means “good enough for me for now” and “bad enough for me for now” with no appeal to spurious absolutes, just as with any branch of aesthetics.

And that’s what leads me to antitheism without recourse to absolutes, just as I've been lead to antifascism without recourse to absolutes.
« Last Edit: May 18, 2016, 09:24:28 AM by bluehillside »
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Udayana

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #130 on: May 18, 2016, 11:44:57 AM »
...
First, I don’t just assert that altruism is inherent. It’s been studied exhaustively in nature, from humans to elephants to dolphins to vampire bats to social insects. Bill Hamilton is the best known biologist in this field, and he showed how it makes perfect evolutionary sense by optimising flourishing at the genomic level.

It, altruism, is a perfectly good response in some common game situations and that is why we see it in nature. However the game is always changing. Once you are aware of a tactic in use by the "competition" you can exploit that fact and gain an advantage, but the game then changes.
 
We can understand pack mentality and use it to turn wolves into dogs to do our bidding, then destroy the wild predator, destroying the ecology of vast swathes of the planet as a result. Later we might want the wolf back.
 
Once you have everyone going along with the "golden rule", the next step is to cheat, grab the advantage and treat the rest as peasants.

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Second, I make no claim that religion has no part in what’s good. To the contrary, I don’t doubt that sometimes some people do good things when they otherwise would not precisely because of their religious beliefs. The premise though is in two parts: first, “faith” is no more a reliable guide to truth than just guessing; second, just guessing will manifestly lead to more wrong answers than it will to right ones. I “cherry pick” only to the extent that I follow that logic to its conclusion.

It seems to me that you're mixing up two different things here - firstly, the technical matter of being able to decide on which abstract models best fit observed events and, secondly, the matter of being wrong or right on moral issues which really depends on understanding of each others emotions and desires and agreeing objectives. "Faith" here will get better (in the sense of more feeling happier) results than guessing because it will be based on discussion following agreement (or indoctrination) of some basic framework.

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Third, you’re straying dangerously close to Trollboy idiocy here – morality must be “real” or it’s “arse pull”, “real” means absolute, therefore god. I merely say that my determination of “good” and “bad” means “good enough for me for now” and “bad enough for me for now” with no appeal to spurious absolutes, just as with any branch of aesthetics.

This is correct but means the nutcase bomber being just as "right", in his/her own eyes, as you are in yours. In fact they feel morally superior just because of their belief in a god and absolute morality. 

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And that’s what leads me to antitheism without recourse to absolutes, just as I've been lead to antifascism without recourse to absolutes.

Which game you play and how you play it is your own choice, to the extent that, in a deterministic universe, you have one.
 
« Last Edit: May 18, 2016, 11:49:03 AM by Udayana »
Ah, but I was so much older then ... I'm younger than that now

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #131 on: May 18, 2016, 12:38:03 PM »
Udayama,

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It, altruism, is a perfectly good response in some common game situations and that is why we see it in nature. However the game is always changing. Once you are aware of a tactic in use by the "competition" you can exploit that fact and gain an advantage, but the game then changes.
 
We can understand pack mentality and use it to turn wolves into dogs to do our bidding, then destroy the wild predator, destroying the ecology of vast swathes of the planet as a result. Later we might want the wolf back.
 
Once you have everyone going along with the "golden rule", the next step is to cheat, grab the advantage and treat the rest as peasants.

All of that may well be true, but I was responding to the charge of just asserting altruism to being the default position for human behaviour when in fact it’s well demonstrated and documented in the literature in our and in many other species.

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It seems to me that you're mixing up two different things here - firstly, the technical matter of being able to decide on which abstract models best fit observed events and, secondly, the matter of being wrong or right on moral issues which really depends on understanding of each others emotions and desires and agreeing objectives.

I don’t think so. Rather I was thinking specifically of the claims of fact made on the basis of faith – “god”, “heaven/hell” etc – and suggesting that such claims are no more likely to be true than just guessing. Absent a method of any kind to test these claims of fact, that doesn’t seem an unreasonable position to take to me. That’s your “which abstract models best fit observed events” bit.

Morality – judgments about what’s “good” and “bad” – on the other hand, are a different matter, albeit often situated on claims of fact. For this purpose though it’s a second order issue: “homosexuality is wrong because god says so” is situated on the claimed fact of “God”, and so I dismiss the rationale before we get to the outcome.
       
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"Faith" here will get better (in the sense of more feeling happier) results than guessing because it will be based on discussion following agreement (or indoctrination) of some basic framework.

I’m not so sure about that. First, some of the most vehemently “faithful” here seem to me to be least happy posters – thoroughly bitter and twisted, hateful towards those who don’t share their opinions etc. Second though, faith claims of fact are in a different category from concerns about what makes us happier or not (which brings us back to the atheism/antitheism category error). What I think to be true and what I want to be true are very different things. 

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This is correct but means that the nutcase bomber being just as "right", in his/her own eyes, as you are in yours. In fact they feel morally superior just because of their belief in a god and absolute morality.

Yes – in their eyes they are morally correct; in my eyes I’m morally correct. How could it be otherwise? In the absence of an empirical measure for “moral correctness” that must be the case, just as Fred thinks Kylie’s “I Should Be So Lucky” is musical genius and Mary thinks it’s crap. The best I can hope for therefore is to be sufficiently persuasive to convince more people to share my opinion than the ISIS bomber is to persuade people of his.
 
I don’t have a problem with this because I don’t claim an absolute, gold standard for moral good/bad so I’m fully aware that – when all said and done – it’s all intuition and reason leading to opinion with no pretence at objectivity to underpin it.   
   
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Which game you play and how you play it is your own choice, to the extent that, in a deterministic universe, you have one.

Yes it is – but that doesn’t prevent me from being both an atheist and an antitheist. I play the hand I’m dealt. The problem with the deterministic discussion here is that it’s going nuclear – any discussion about art or politics or philosophy or anything – could be met with the same reply of, “but it’s all deterministic isn’t it?” to which the only answer is, “yes, but so what?”
« Last Edit: May 18, 2016, 02:18:44 PM by bluehillside »
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Jack Knave

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #132 on: May 18, 2016, 07:14:08 PM »
NS,

So how would you feel about removing religion and replacing is with scepticism as an alternative?
Shouldn't the problem be tackled from the other-side, so to speak. What is religion for? Why did it evolve? What purpose or function is it fulfilling in the most fundamental sense of our humanity?

Once we see this then we can start to see how to replace it or remove it.

Jack Knave

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #133 on: May 18, 2016, 07:21:53 PM »
Rhi,

But surely the point is that religion doesn't actually offer an afterlife at all - just the bonkers promise of it if you follow the rules. Wouldn't teaching rationalism and scepticism help give the lie to that supposed offer?
Education isn't the answer, usually, because religion touches something deep in the human psyche. Education is just a patina in life not a fundamental element of it.

Jack Knave

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #134 on: May 18, 2016, 07:47:22 PM »
number of people who have been convicted of a crime vs number of those who have not?
If people are well fed they won't have any need to fight. When there is no food they'll do anything for a piece of bread. Your answer doesn't hold true.

Jack Knave

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #135 on: May 18, 2016, 08:04:43 PM »
Dear Sane,

That's what I have been saying!! We are a religious lot, maybe they will listen to you, they don't listen to me, my genius is not appreciated on this forum ::) ::)

Gonnagle.
If you mean religious in the generic sense then yes but it is the specificity that is engaged in that is off the rails.

Jack Knave

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #136 on: May 18, 2016, 08:09:57 PM »
Yes, it is (on both counts). However, we are sophisticated cogitating systems - for all practical purposes (god's-eye view excluded), we are capable of making free rational choices, in accordance with that part of our natures and avoiding the consequences of other parts of our natures. Determinism isn't fatalism.
Are you advocating free-will here? And who is this 'we'?

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #137 on: May 18, 2016, 09:07:50 PM »


Third, you’re straying dangerously close to Trollboy idiocy here – morality must be “real” or it’s “arse pull”, “real” means absolute, therefore god. I merely say that my determination of “good” and “bad” means “good enough for me for now” and “bad enough for me for now” with no appeal to spurious absolutes, just as with any branch of aesthetics.

I'm trying to work out where the emphasis is here is it the ''Good'' and ''Bad'' or the ''for me''.
In any case if it is just for you. What business do you have inflicting your ideas of Good and Bad on the rest of us? You would look pretty daft devoting the hours you do extolling the virtues of your ideas of good and bad, extolling the virtues of a liking for marmite and criticising those who hate it. What makes it less daft extolling the virtues of your own morality?

Stranger

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #138 on: May 19, 2016, 08:48:10 AM »
What business do you have inflicting your ideas of Good and Bad on the rest of us? You would look pretty daft devoting the hours you do extolling the virtues of your ideas of good and bad, extolling the virtues of a liking for marmite and criticising those who hate it. What makes it less daft extolling the virtues of your own morality?

Well Vlad, I dunno....

...oh, hang on! Perhaps it's got something to do with how important morality is to our society, how we all live together and treat each other; that kind of thing?

Then again, maybe you think that's no more important than whether people like Marmite or not...
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Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #139 on: May 19, 2016, 05:44:41 PM »
Well Vlad, I dunno....

...oh, hang on! Perhaps it's got something to do with how important morality is to our society, how we all live together and treat each other; that kind of thing?

Then again, maybe you think that's no more important than whether people like Marmite or not...
Yes I agree it is important to society.....but Bluehillside has played the ''morality as things Good or bad for ME'' card rendering any of your ''society'' talk non sequitur.

I'm sorry but Hillside has ''comprehensively pissed on your bonfire''.

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #140 on: May 19, 2016, 06:25:07 PM »
Yes I agree it is important to society.....but Bluehillside has played the ''morality as things Good or bad for ME'' card rendering any of your ''society'' talk non sequitur.

I'm sorry but Hillside has ''comprehensively pissed on your bonfire''.

You don't half get confused...
  • If there is no objective morality, then we each have our own views of what is right and wrong (although, as we are all human, there is a fair degree of consensus).
  • Societies needs rules and some idea of what is considered acceptable within them.
  • The result is a messy system of rule setting and discourse in which societies influence individuals and individuals (and groups) can influence societies.
  • Hence, morality is subjective but we still need to argue and talk about it because it's important, it affects all of us, and allows societies to change (abolition of slavery, equal rights and so on).
It actually makes no practical difference at all if there is objective morality because, even if there is, nobody has come up with a universally accepted way of deciding what it is.
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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #141 on: May 19, 2016, 06:29:24 PM »
Some,

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You don't half get confused...

If there is no objective morality, then we each have our own views of what is right and wrong (although, as we are all human, there is a fair degree of consensus).

Societies needs rules and some idea of what is considered acceptable within them.

The result is a messy system of rule setting and discourse in which societies influence individuals and individuals (and groups) can influence societies.

Hence, morality is subjective but we still need to argue and talk about it because it's important, it affects all of us, and allows societies to change (abolition of slavery, equal rights and so on).

It actually makes no practical difference at all if there is objective morality because, even if there is, nobody has come up with a universally accepted way of deciding what it is.

Very well expressed, and spot on.
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Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #142 on: May 19, 2016, 07:14:30 PM »
You don't half get confused...
  • If there is no objective morality, then we each have our own views of what is right and wrong (although, as we are all human, there is a fair degree of consensus).
  • Societies needs rules and some idea of what is considered acceptable within them.
  • The result is a messy system of rule setting and discourse in which societies influence individuals and individuals (and groups) can influence societies.
  • Hence, morality is subjective but we still need to argue and talk about it because it's important, it affects all of us, and allows societies to change (abolition of slavery, equal rights and so on).
It actually makes no practical difference at all if there is objective morality because, even if there is, nobody has come up with a universally accepted way of deciding what it is.
Don't tell me. tell Hillside......He's the one who was forced into saying that morality was what was Good or bad for HIM.

I totally believe that he thinks that.

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #143 on: May 19, 2016, 07:17:41 PM »
Just a note to SKoS and bhs, I recognise I have to reply to you but it needs some time and currently just dipping in and out.

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #144 on: May 19, 2016, 07:29:56 PM »


Third, you’re straying dangerously close to Trollboy idiocy here – morality must be “real” or it’s “arse pull”
I'm afraid it's worse than that Hillside not only is your morality not ''real'.....it isn't ''morality'.

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #145 on: May 19, 2016, 09:55:27 PM »
NS,

Quote
Just a note to SKoS and bhs, I recognise I have to reply to you but it needs some time and currently just dipping in and out.

No problem.Trollboy is going off on one of his total misrepresentations of what's actually been said here so maybe once it's past his bedtime we can pick up where we left off.

I have to say that I enjoy our exchanges, especially when Some, Bramble, Wiggs and a few others join in too. Thank you.
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Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #146 on: May 19, 2016, 10:50:51 PM »
Trollboy is going off on one of his total misrepresentations of what's actually been said here
Did you or did you not write this in reply#129

'' I merely say that my determination of “good” and “bad” means “good enough for me for now” and “bad enough for me for now”

How is that different from saying ''religion is true for me''. Since you complain at people telling you that they believe religion is true, it is hypocritical for you to say that your morality is right and theirs is wrong.

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #147 on: May 20, 2016, 09:16:57 AM »
Trollboy,

I had decided not to reply to you until you could manage a reply that didn't completely misrepresent what I'd said. This though:

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Did you or did you not write this in reply#129

'' I merely say that my determination of “good” and “bad” means “good enough for me for now” and “bad enough for me for now”

How is that different from saying ''religion is true for me''. Since you complain at people telling you that they believe religion is true, it is hypocritical for you to say that your morality is right and theirs is wrong.

...is so completely bonkers as to force a correction. What I meant of course was that the arguments for "good" and "bad" are good/bad enough for me to take a position in either case without the ludicrous notion of an objective set of rules we could just look up instead. The last thing I thought, implied or said was that moral good and bad are determined by what happens to suit me personally. Some's last post explains the position perfectly clearly.
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Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #148 on: May 21, 2016, 08:25:43 AM »
Trollboy,

I had decided not to reply to you until you could manage a reply that didn't completely misrepresent what I'd said. This though:

...is so completely bonkers as to force a correction. What I meant of course was that the arguments for "good" and "bad" are good/bad enough for me to take a position in either case without the ludicrous notion of an objective set of rules we could just look up instead. The last thing I thought, implied or said was that moral good and bad are determined by what happens to suit me personally. Some's last post explains the position perfectly clearly.
OK, so now you are qualifying what you actually mean.
So far I'm getting morality as a consensus from you. We can investigate that but i'm on a flyer today.
Other than that isn't the final moral driver in your ''Consensus''....... not getting caught?

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Re: Antitheism
« Reply #149 on: May 21, 2016, 09:06:27 AM »
Other than that isn't the final moral driver in your ''Consensus''....... not getting caught?

 ::)

If the driver for the consensus was not getting caught, then you wouldn't make any rules to break, then nobody would "get caught"...

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