TS,
Specifically or just in general?
Specifically the matter you asked whether you were wrong about.
Everything everyone says here regarding theism is opinion. You say I'm wrong. I say you are wrong. That's the game. Don't think I don't know who you are.
No it isn’t. Sometimes people only assert their beliefs to be true; sometimes people provide arguments to justify them. These are epistemically different positions that you cannot just reduce to “it’s all opinion”.
Again, specifically or are you operating on the assumption that whatever I say about the Bible and God and gods is false? According to you whatever I have to say about the aforementioned subjects is wrong. My lengthy posts on historicity and Genesis chapter one, for example. I don't recall a well informed rebuttal of any of that. I just recall people like you, in some sense, saying I was wrong. I don't recall an argument, really. Do we need to revisit those?
I don't think so because, well, I'm just wrong, correct?
You’ve missed the point. What I actually asked you wasn’t about your textural analysis of Genesis - it was whether you believed its factual claims to be
true. You said that you do, but you’re unable to explain why. I don’t just assume that whatever you say about the Bible/God is false – what I identify though is your inability to justify your beliefs rationally so you give me no reason to think you’re right.
You may have to refresh my memory. I don't recall that. I'm not familiar with everyone here yet, but all I recall is people saying things like I'm wrong. No explanation. Just wrong.
That’s plainly not true. Whenever I identify that you’re wrong about something I take the trouble to explain to you
why you’re wrong. To take an example, I’ve explained to you why diluting terms like “god” so far that they become stripped of their delineating theistic meaning so as hide behind your deracinated version is cheating. You could have tried to rebut that with a counter-argument of your own but instead you repeat the initial mistake, presumably in the hope the problem will just go away.
[Laughs] Okay. Well, I'll have to try to remember that.
Yes. If you do have an argument that isn’t wrong to justify your beliefs, why not tell us what it is? Why keep is a secret? Why paint yourself as just another faith head, epistemically indistinguishable from the leprechaunist?
Now I think you are telling the truth as you see it. No argument from you. I'm just wrong. Not much point in it, is there? Except for perhaps that I see and am willing to acknowledge the possibility that I'm wrong and you are right. That's why I call you (fundamentalist militant atheists as a collective) ideologues. Now, in my nearly 30 years of debating these atheists I've actually come across a few that were well informed outside of tradition and capable of making good points. Arguments. I'm not saying it isn't here, I'm just saying I haven't seen it. But I'm still interested in hearing your argument. So . . . anytime. [looks at watch]
Again, yes you have seen the argument. There is no method to distinguish faith claims from just guessing; there
is a method to distinguish reasoned claims from just guessing – it’s called logic, and it’s verifiable with real world applications. Try comparing jumping out of a 20th storey window because it’s your faith that you’ll land safely with my reasoned argument that it won’t end well. Reducing all epistemic claims to equivalence (“OK, I might be guessing but so are you”) is sometime known as “going nuclear”. Here’s why it’s a bad idea:
http://stephenlaw.blogspot.com/2011/09/going-nuclear.html No, I have to correct your ignorance of language, which is why that is what I first attempted to do, announcing at that time that it was a futile excursion.
Not even close. It’s not a correction to keep eructating the claim that words with multiple meanings can be treated as if they mean the same thing.
[Sigh] Colloquial and metaphoric applications of the word God doesn't negate the meaning of the word. Examples of various Gods, gods, and goddesses are not meanings of the word. All you have to tell me is what does it take to be a god. If you say religious, supernatural, colloquial, metaphoric or give only examples of the word God (or god) you are not giving it's meaning. It's meaning is implicit in the application as well as the example but not given in it's use. To do so would be the same as saying that the meaning of the word man, prince, king, lord et cetera used in a similar way would be definitive of those words or negate their meaning.
(Bigger sigh…) Yes colloquial use of the term “god” do “negate” the religious meaning. This relationship between language and reality really has got you foxed still hasn’t it. If someone wants to say “I believe in god” they intend that term to have
a meaning – and when the context is religious that meaning requires his god to have some basic religious properties (typically non-materiality for example). What he isn’t saying though is that those same properties somehow become invested in an object that someone happens to think to be very good or to “venerate”. If you expand the contextual meaning of "god" to include any other meaning the statement “I believe in god” becomes white noise. Which use of the term “god” is the speaker trying to tell us he believes in?
The definition of atheism doesn't specify which God or gods are in question. The term disbelief or lack of belief isn't exclusively a religious connotation.
Yes it is. It’s an epistemic response to the claims religious people make about their religious gods. Disagreeing with someone’s opinion about Clapton on the other hand doesn’t thereby make me an atheist – it just means we have different tastes in music.
The disbelief or lack of belief isn't a trust as in, for example, the Latin word credit, it's a question of existence. The only way an atheist can adhere to the term atheist by definition is to limit the use of the word God and gods thereby excluding most applications and negating the meaning of the word itself.
This is more of the same nonsense. Atheism is merely a response to the claims religious people make about their religious gods. Different, colloquial uses of the term “god” have no relevance to that.
The result is an ignorance, not only of the use of God and gods in a Biblical and theological structure but also the possibility that the concept of God and gods in their intended meaning in any language, primitive or otherwise, of any religious or secular application is erroneous.
Oh dear. The atheist can only respond to the claims about gods that are bought to his attention. More to the point, atheists can only respond to
the arguments theists attempt to justify their beliefs in those gods. That’s it – nothing more, nothing less. Yes I am “ignorant” of most of the countless gods people have claimed over the millennia (as are you), but that has no impact on my atheism. Atheism isn’t the statement “there are no gods”; it’s just the statement “I have no good reason to think there to be gods”. That’s why I’m an atheist. What aren't you?
In other words, an atheist may have many gods in their lives which they don't even know are gods.
Yes, but until someone can justify that speculation the atheist has no reason to think that to be the case and so proceeds accordingly.
This can be a problem if the atheist should become theist. So for Jehovah God of the Bible to say you shall have no other gods before me isn't a command to abstain from metaphoric or colloquial applications as can be seen in those very uses in context to the command itself. It begs the question what is or who are those gods?
That’s a second order problem, relevant only if you have persuasive reasons to think them to exist
at all.
So the theists try to explain this away by dividing all other gods in comparison to the One True God as being false as opposed to the true, but that doesn't make sense because some were true (Moses, Jesus, the Judges of Israel) and some weren't. Satan, Molech, Ashtoreth, Dagon et cetera. The tactic of the atheist is to say no literal god ever existed, (by extension excluding any colloquial or metaphoric application) which doesn't make sense because, at least to them, Moses, Jesus and the Judges of Israel existed in a literal sense.
Atheism does not say that gods don’t exist/have never existed at all. That would be a statement of certainty that’s would be impossible to justify. That’s why an atheist need only confine himself to the statement, “I have no good reasons to think that gods do or have ever existed”. Sure as an atheist I proceed
as if there are/were no gods, but epistemically that’s not what atheism requires.
I’ve corrected you on this several time now – why then do you keep misrepresenting atheism?
And that doesn't even begin to address the complications of such an argument presents to Shintoism and Hinduism. The latter which was addressed briefly by Sriram in our discussions of gods and the former which I myself brought up. I think. If I didn't then I am now.
It can certainly be argued that ultimately, at least given the very common misconception, pedantic and as far as I'm concerned we've given it more than enough time.
?
Yeah, sure. You just keep repeating that you are right and I'm wrong. No reason to give any reason. No real argument. Who's going to disagree with you? Pat yourself on the back for being obstinately obtuse with just the right smug self righteous ideological dispossession. Typical atheist tactic.
No I don’t. When I tell you that you’re wrong I also tell you why you’re wrong. Ironically, your charge of repetition describes you rather than me – when you’re given falsifying arguments, why won’t you try to rebut them with reasoning of your own rather than the same falsified assertions?
Why would you make such an ignorant statement? You suggest that to be faithful exclusively applies to the theistic or religious?
“Faith” is a term religious people use in a
context. I was merely showing you that your tactic of dragging multiple meanings into one so as to make meaningful contextualised discussion impossible applies equally to this term as much as it does to “god”, “divine” etc.
Venerated colloquially or metaphorically speaking? What about your "devil's food" cake? Implicit in the Devil's existence? Angel food cake? What does devil mean? Slanderer. Angel? Messenger. What's that got to do with cake? Dark. Light. It's nonsensical.
Damn these words!
No, words are fine. What isn’t fine though is homogenising their sometimes multiple meanings as Trojan horses for specifically religious discussions.
I dare say it's not such a mystery.
That’s what she says.
If I were mentally challenged the equivalent would be lost upon me but it isn't, you see. It's lost upon you. That's okay, though, because we can carry on as if the specific God in question regarding atheism and theism, for that matter, is as limited as you suggest. I told you you wouldn't get it. I know that when you say God you mean one specific God or application of God's most commonly known in Western culture.
Ah, and there’s the straw man – another fallacy. I’ve not said that theism/atheism concerns a specific god at all, as you know full well. What I’ve actually said is that if you want to discuss god(s) in a religious context, then you need to use that term in its religious sense. If instead you want to talk about Clapton though then start a correspondence in Rolling Stone with no religious context at all. Just smashing different meanings together is called a category error – (yet) another fallacy.
HEY! Don't knock my ability to rant in a most excellent fashion! Nor underestimate the, uh, the . . . whatsit? Jovial operation of error. Try to Google that, my illusive argumentative, and I'll show you a green dog, see if I don't!
I didn’t knock it – you’re very competent at reason-free ranting (and at describing same as “excellent points”). That’s not a good thing though.
Man! (colloquially speaking) I thought I was arrogant!
With reason. If you can’t produce coherent and cogent reasons to justify your beliefs to others though, why would it not give you pause that you can’t justify them to yourself either?