Author Topic: The Sunday Assembly - Surprising BBC?  (Read 20920 times)

Nearly Sane

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Re: The Sunday Assembly - Surprising BBC?
« Reply #150 on: August 09, 2016, 03:01:12 PM »
Wiggs,

Quite so. I see the premise: stars, whatever; and I see the conclusion: "God". What I don't see is any connecting logic that's cogent to take you from the former to the latter.


That surely isn't the issue in terms of the question pf 'hiddenness' - we're on a fairly specific questiion here - 'is God hiding?' and I don't think that is easily justified.

Gonnagle

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Re: The Sunday Assembly - Surprising BBC?
« Reply #151 on: August 09, 2016, 03:30:58 PM »
Dear Blue,

Just to note, I am thinking, your thoughts are not wasted on me, only to say at the moment, can you steer clear of the Christian God thing, God is God, putting a label on God does not help.

Quote
Assume no God for a moment – how would you then expect the world to look different?   

I will give it a go, trouble is I am human, and I think that is where it all goes pear shaped, I can't reduce us ( humans ) to some kind of accident, it makes no sense, Einstein, Mozart, Wordsworth, Love, hate, passion, the laws of the Universe, this living breathing world, the whole shooting match.

No to much, I think my brain just tilted ( for younger viewers that is when you nudge the pinball machine and it stops working ).

Gonnagle.
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Dicky Underpants

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Re: The Sunday Assembly - Surprising BBC?
« Reply #152 on: August 09, 2016, 04:34:14 PM »
Stephen,

Indeed it is an odd - and irrelevant - point, though according to Vlad "desiring a relationship" with something in some unexplained way "points to" that something being real.


Hi blue

Your point is entirely valid. The desire to make sense of life, to see that some ultimate meaning might exist in humanity's darkest hours might well be common enough. Though there are those who are happy to accept that there is no ultimate meaning, no matter what happens to them. Jacques Monod, the French biochemist seemed to think such sentiments were universal, whilst acknowledging that that there was no meaningful reality, concomitant with the desire that there might be.

As for Vlad's "desiring a relationship with God" - this is very revealing of his second-hand approach to all these matters. The "relationship with God" idea never existed in Christianity before the advent of the German Pietist movement in the early 17th century, I think. Before that, no believer would ever have thought of belief in God in terms of 'relationship' in the personal sense which is implied here. And if I remember rightly, Vlad also spoke of his conversion in the second-hand words of C.S. Lewis.
The point I'm making in the above comments is in tune with something that you've often said - the conversion experience very often happens to be couched in terms of the religious culture in which a person has been brought up- which I'd broaden to say, couched in the terms of the literature one has been reading, or other social influences which one may have unconsciously absorbed.
I certainly speak from experience. Though when the chips are down, I can only say that at the lowest moments of my life "Seek and ye shall find" has been so profoundly untrue that I find it difficult not to despise those who still try to perpetrate these tired old clichés.
"Generally speaking, the errors in religion are dangerous; those in philosophy only ridiculous.”

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Dicky Underpants

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Re: The Sunday Assembly - Surprising BBC?
« Reply #153 on: August 09, 2016, 04:44:48 PM »
Thanks for sharing that SP and I understand what you mean in your last paragraph.  Personal experiences are very difficult to explain and for others to comprehend.
What you say in your second paragraph shows you have a great faith.

Personal experiences are indeed very difficult to explain. The tragic thing is that there are such a variety reported - some being truly Shakespearean in grandeur - but so diverse as to admit no comprehensive indicators for belief. What they perhaps do suggest is that the human brain is capable of producing more fantastic visions and experiences than the normal course of life provides us. But as for experiences of 'God' 'ultimate reality', indicators of the life hereafter, I think not. Though once I was prepared to think so.
"Generally speaking, the errors in religion are dangerous; those in philosophy only ridiculous.”

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Dicky Underpants

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Re: The Sunday Assembly - Surprising BBC?
« Reply #154 on: August 09, 2016, 04:47:50 PM »
God is God, putting a label on God does not help.

Gonnagle.

'God' is a label in itself, though whether there is a 'something' on which it may be stuck is another matter. All the other fine things you mention - are they not just fine and beautiful in themselves, without being pointers to something else?

The argument you make is largely the one that St Paul makes in Romans chapter one - a particularly obnoxious rant of his. I can forgive St Paul quite a lot, and don't think he was quite such a bad cove as often painted. But Romans chapter one just makes me want to expectorate violently.
« Last Edit: August 09, 2016, 04:57:48 PM by Dicky Underpants »
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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: The Sunday Assembly - Surprising BBC?
« Reply #155 on: August 09, 2016, 04:51:56 PM »
NS,

Quote
That surely isn't the issue in terms of the question pf 'hiddenness' - we're on a fairly specific questiion here - 'is God hiding?' and I don't think that is easily justified.

It is the issue as a response to Gonnagle's answer specifically to the hiddenness question - ie, "he isn't hiding at all, just look at the stars" etc.
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Udayana

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Re: The Sunday Assembly - Surprising BBC?
« Reply #156 on: August 09, 2016, 04:53:10 PM »
...
No to much, I think my brain just tilted ( for younger viewers that is when you nudge the pinball machine and it stops working ).

Meaningless questions have a tendency to halt the thinking machine. God or no god how/why should you expect the world to look one way or another, or anything at all?

Contrary to some previous statements there are actually many varieties of logic including modal logic and many-valued logics (Godel, Lukasiewicz, etc). They are just formal mathematical systems used to try and understand the world as it appears, including our own minds and thought. We try to find the best one that corresponds with and can be used to model what we observe, however there is no reason why any one of these systems must be the "true" one that describes the universe, or any reason for the universe to conform to any of them.

Ah, but I was so much older then ... I'm younger than that now

Dicky Underpants

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Re: The Sunday Assembly - Surprising BBC?
« Reply #157 on: August 09, 2016, 05:05:30 PM »
Meaningless questions have a tendency to halt the thinking machine. God or no god how/why should you expect the world to look one way or another, or anything at all?

Contrary to some previous statements there are actually many varieties of logic including modal logic and many-valued logics (Godel, Lukasiewicz, etc). They are just formal mathematical systems used to try and understand the world as it appears, including our own minds and thought. We try to find the best one that corresponds with and can be used to model what we observe, however there is no reason why any one of these systems must be the "true" one that describes the universe, or any reason for the universe to conform to any of them.

However, science at least proceeds on the basis of establishing paradigms, which become consolidated by accumulated evidence. Some of these have become such a basis of scientific enquiry, that it is unlikely that they will be overturned. It would be a monumental day if the Theory of Evolution, the Theory of Relativity etc  prove to be out of conformity with the nature of the universe as it is. Maybe quantum mechanics and string theory will prove the undoing of all such paradigms?
"Generally speaking, the errors in religion are dangerous; those in philosophy only ridiculous.”

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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: The Sunday Assembly - Surprising BBC?
« Reply #158 on: August 09, 2016, 05:06:07 PM »
Gonners,

Quote
Just to note, I am thinking, your thoughts are not wasted on me, only to say at the moment, can you steer clear of the Christian God thing, God is God, putting a label on God does not help.

Fine, but while I hear the "god is god" line a lot that's hard to reconcile that with the observable fact that many people have many descriptions (and often mutually contradictory ones at that) for the god/gods in which they believe. They seem therefore to be talking about different gods, unless that is you have some means of deciding who's right and who's wrong in their understanding of the one god.     

Quote
I will give it a go, trouble is I am human, and I think that is where it all goes pear shaped, I can't reduce us ( humans ) to some kind of accident,

What "accident"? Just because there's no reason to think that there's an end game, a grand plan etc doesn't then mean that we're an "accident" - that's a false binary. Evolution for example operates on well-understood principles such that while genetic mutations may occur randomly (inasmuch as "randomly" has a colloquial meaning) the rest is physics and chemistry. The danger here is failing to grasp the anthropic principle - it's Douglas Adams' puddle again.

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...it makes no sense, Einstein, Mozart, Wordsworth, Love, hate, passion, the laws of the Universe, this living breathing world, the whole shooting match.

It only makes no sense if you start from the wrong reference point - the puddle again.

Quote
No to much, I think my brain just tilted ( for younger viewers that is when you nudge the pinball machine and it stops working ).

Well, keep tilting until you reach the other end of the telescope then! Think of the lottery winner's fallacy - "look at the ginormous odds against my win. How special must I be!" etc. Neither Camelot nor "the universe" care who the winners are - regardless of how remarkable they think themselves to be. 
« Last Edit: August 09, 2016, 05:08:24 PM by bluehillside »
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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: The Sunday Assembly - Surprising BBC?
« Reply #159 on: August 09, 2016, 05:36:52 PM »
Hi Dickey,

Quote
Your point is entirely valid. The desire to make sense of life, to see that some ultimate meaning might exist in humanity's darkest hours might well be common enough. Though there are those who are happy to accept that there is no ultimate meaning, no matter what happens to them. Jacques Monod, the French biochemist seemed to think such sentiments were universal, whilst acknowledging that that there was no meaningful reality, concomitant with the desire that there might be.

Well yes, though a common criticism of that from the religious is that those of us who think that way must be shallow, ungrounded – after all, we have no meaning in our lives!

It fails I think for several reasons. Fundamentally it’s an argument from consequences – “I think that there has to be a universal planner for there to be meaning in my life, therefore there’s a universal planner!”

It also fails to grasp that many people are perfectly capable of feelings every bit as deep and profound and important as they are within the paradigm of the uncaring and largely parochial universe we appear to occupy. Why wouldn’t we be? I’d even go further sometimes – how much more grand, more transcendent is the understanding science gives us of the universe than tawdry and un-ambitious tales of porcine slaughter, tribal genocide etc?   

Quote
As for Vlad's "desiring a relationship with God" - this is very revealing of his second-hand approach to all these matters. The "relationship with God" idea never existed in Christianity before the advent of the German Pietist movement in the early 17th century, I think. Before that, no believer would ever have thought of belief in God in terms of 'relationship' in the personal sense which is implied here. And if I remember rightly, Vlad also spoke of his conversion in the second-hand words of C.S. Lewis.

Yup, though it’s worse than that – he takes his “desire for a relationship” as some kind of evidence that “points to” there being a god with which to have that relationship. Possibly an inadvertent channelling of a mutated cosmological argument (“cosmological lite”?), but I have no idea what he thinks the connecting logic to be. 

Quote
The point I'm making in the above comments is in tune with something that you've often said - the conversion experience very often happens to be couched in terms of the religious culture in which a person has been brought up- which I'd broaden to say, couched in the terms of the literature one has been reading, or other social influences which one may have unconsciously absorbed. I certainly speak from experience. Though when the chips are down, I can only say that at the lowest moments of my life "Seek and ye shall find" has been so profoundly untrue that I find it difficult not to despise those who still try to perpetrate these tired old clichés.

I wonder how that works. Perhaps they do “find” in the sense that in their desperation their critical faculties are so compromised and their confirmation bias so heightened that they’ll grab onto a narrative that’s comforting regardless. It’s funny, when you’re desperate that’s generally reckoned to be the worst time to make life-changing discoveries and decisions, yet in respect of “God” it’s often a prerequisite. I’m struck by how often we hear stories of the, “I was a drunken wretch and then I was saved” type, rather than “after a long period of calm reflection and deep contemplation weighing up all the arguments and the supporting evidence I found god”. Some have no doubt – C.S.Lewis (as you brought him up) was one such, but many don’t.

Odd.   
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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: The Sunday Assembly - Surprising BBC?
« Reply #160 on: August 09, 2016, 05:44:54 PM »
Udayama,

Quote
Meaningless questions have a tendency to halt the thinking machine. God or no god how/why should you expect the world to look one way or another, or anything at all?

Contrary to some previous statements there are actually many varieties of logic including modal logic and many-valued logics (Godel, Lukasiewicz, etc). They are just formal mathematical systems used to try and understand the world as it appears, including our own minds and thought. We try to find the best one that corresponds with and can be used to model what we observe, however there is no reason why any one of these systems must be the "true" one that describes the universe, or any reason for the universe to conform to any of them.

Dicky has got there before me, but the problem largely goes away when you don't ascribe universal, absolute values to "true". The logic that conforms with the way the universe appears to be, mediated by inter-subjective experience provides truths that are true enough to provide solutions. Those truths may yet be not true with a different understanding of the universe, but for now how would we know that pending a method to test the findings of different modes of logic? 
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Leonard James

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Re: The Sunday Assembly - Surprising BBC?
« Reply #161 on: August 09, 2016, 08:14:10 PM »
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wigginhall

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Re: The Sunday Assembly - Surprising BBC?
« Reply #162 on: August 10, 2016, 02:12:25 PM »
Dicky wrote:

Quote
The point I'm making in the above comments is in tune with something that you've often said - the conversion experience very often happens to be couched in terms of the religious culture in which a person has been brought up- which I'd broaden to say, couched in the terms of the literature one has been reading, or other social influences which one may have unconsciously absorbed.
I certainly speak from experience. Though when the chips are down, I can only say that at the lowest moments of my life "Seek and ye shall find" has been so profoundly untrue that I find it difficult not to despise those who still try to perpetrate these tired old clichés.

I think that's quite a common experience among non-believers.   The interesting thing about God's absence is that it's an old topic, and has often been discussed in religious circles.   After all, Jesus says, 'why hast thou forsaken me?', which is itself a quote from the psalms (22).   

A famous modern version is Mother Teresa who is supposed to have moaned a lot about the absence of God.  However, 'absence' has been construed by religious people as the dark night of soul, almost necessary as a spiritual purgation, but by atheists as non-existence, so it is very ambivalent.   In fact, you can find hiddenness written up as a kind of proof of God!  But this becomes boring, doesn't it?
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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: The Sunday Assembly - Surprising BBC?
« Reply #163 on: August 10, 2016, 03:59:53 PM »
Wiggs,

Quote
I think that's quite a common experience among non-believers.   The interesting thing about God's absence is that it's an old topic, and has often been discussed in religious circles.   After all, Jesus says, 'why hast thou forsaken me?', which is itself a quote from the psalms (22).   

A famous modern version is Mother Teresa who is supposed to have moaned a lot about the absence of God.  However, 'absence' has been construed by religious people as the dark night of soul, almost necessary as a spiritual purgation, but by atheists as non-existence, so it is very ambivalent.   In fact, you can find hiddenness written up as a kind of proof of God!  But this becomes boring, doesn't it?

And casuistic. No matter what the finding - that there's no evidence whatever for "God" for example - the answer comes, "ah, but that'll be a proof for god then", often accompanied by some of the most convoluted reasoning known to man or beast (cf Rowan Williams for example). Oddly, when the same arguments are used against conjectures in which the theist does not believe that casuistry falls away ("of course there's no evidence for leprechauns. Why would there be?"). It makes any kind of discourse more or less impossible and thus, as you say, boring.     
« Last Edit: August 10, 2016, 04:10:17 PM by bluehillside »
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