I can see this post has already pretty much derailed (surprise) so this will probably be my last comments on the subject:
RenegadeOfPhunk wrote:marg wrote:And GookK acknowledged it isn't always tied to a religion. So that point is done and overwith..so move on.
Look at GoodK's post directly after your own:
http://mormondiscussions.com/discuss/vi ... 339#134339GoodK wrote:Theism is by definition dogmatic.
GoodK has acknowledged
nothing on the actual point.
No admission has been made regarding one of the central points made in the post I linked to:
Do you even know what the "actual point is? I certainly don't know what
your actual point was. I was responding to the OP, and you hijacked that conversation and made it about how many different meanings there can be for words.
Actually, I think you are sort of talking to yourself here, rather, arguing with yourself. This is what YOU said your point was:
RenegadeOfPhunk wrote:My argument is that the Bible isn't a decent representation of the concept 'Theism' as a whole, as I made very clear earlier. It only represents a very specific subset of 'theistic' thought.
I'm sorry that you didn't follow along. But that really isn't my problem.
No one made this argument that you are arguing against. No one said the Bible is a representation of the concept of Theism as a whole.
Wow.
RenegadeOfPhunk wrote:* Dogma is the real enemy
* All theism is tied to 'dogma'
* Therefore, theism - in it's entirety - is 'bad'. (It can even be morally equated with racism - apparently...)
GoodK didn't state that non-dogmatic theists weren't on the 'hit list'.
What does 'hit list' mean? More confusion... If you asking for clarity on my statement regarding
Theism always being attached to Dogma, I stand by that statement.
I am not saying Dogma can only be attached to Theism. That is the third time this has been said now, first by me, second by marg, third by me again.
RenegadeOfPhunk wrote:What GoodK actually did - when it was made clear the second step in the chain is in fact false - was imply that they were actually no better than the dogmatic theists. They are certainly just as 'stupid'. If you need me to point out those sections of the discussion for you (which I'm sure I may well need to), I can do that for you.
Do that for me, please. I don't want my statements to be mauled by your Boggle word games.
ROP,
Bolding and underlining your own words don't make them any more meaningful. In fact, your post is almost illegible, especially when held up to the OP. You have yet to mount a substantial argument against anything I have said, and it is obvious you really are just arguing for the sake of arguing. I'm not going to play along anymore either. I'd rather talk to people who know what the conversation is about, and know what position they hold.
I do agree that it is possible for an non-theist to subscribe to the "dogma's" of cosmology, or even political dogma.
Tal Bachman wrote:Then you agree that non-theism is not synonymous with skepticism; and therefore, that it seems about as likely for a non-theist to turn into a raving lunatic ideologue willing to commit all manner of horrors upon his fellow men (is everyone digging this sexist language? :P), as it is for a theist.
No, it is not as likely. I'm not saying that. Did you read that? I don't see how.
Let's just quote my last post again (although I wish you'd just pay attention the first time)
goodk wrote:
I am not saying a non-theist is always a skeptic, skepticism is attached to non-theism, or any other generalities about skeptics and non-theists. I actually asked you a question, specific to your dubious Marx example. Did you see it?
I'll also quote Marg, who clarified MY point for YOU. Apparently it didn't help (or maybe my answer didn't suit you?)
marg wrote: Nowhere does GoodK argue that those who don't hold religious beliefs/nontheists are going to be skeptical critical thinkers. He/she is quoting your words in which you claim "many millions have been killed in the name of non-theism" and he/she is commenting on that.
Tal Bachman wrote:Another way of putting what we agree on is that a non-theist "belief system" can't be presumed inherently morally superior to a theist one, or even any less weird. After all, the existence of God is only one of an infinite number of unevidenced beliefs one may have.
I wish you would make your case instead of trying to mold my position to fit yours... please get to the point... By the way I think that a non-theist position is usually morally superior to a theist, and I think history and prison statistics would support that thought.
goodk wrote:I see no substance to that argument as it relates to your case.
Tal Bachman wrote:Why not, since it is crucial to a point you took issue with? Isn't that telling in itself?
You said dogma is not exlusive to theism. I agreed. Still doesn't mean non-theism is dogmatic, nor does it mean non-theists are equally likely to be dogmatic.
Still doesn't mean theism is not dogmatic. Theism is dogmatic. Always.
So like I said, your original comment which I agreed with, is not relevant to the point you are trying to make.
Tal Bachman wrote:They why don't you tell me exactly how they've been refuted by Sam Harris or Russell?
I don't have time to read all of their books to you, but I'll give you some starting points to begin your education:
You made three points - and also implied in your post that a non-theists position is "intellectually crude" (a bold statement)
Tal Bachman wrote:Conclusion: "belief systems" don't need to include a supernatural god to encourage or justify mass murder.
Sam Harris wrote:This really is one of the great canards of religious discourse, the idea that the greatest crimes of the 20th century were perpetrated because of atheism. The core problem for me is divisive dogmatism. There are many kinds of dogmatism. There's nationalism, there's tribalism, there's racism, there's chauvinism. And there's religion. Religion is the only sphere of discourse where dogma is actually a good word, where it is considered ennobling to believe something strongly based on faith.
But first let me deal with Stalin. The killing fields and the gulag were not the product of people being too reluctant to believe things on insufficient evidence. They were not the product of people requiring too much evidence and too much argument in favor of their beliefs. We have people flying planes in our buildings because they have theological grievances against the West. I'm noticing Christians doing terrible things explicitly for religious reasons—for instance, not fund-ing [embryonic] stem-cell research. The motive is always paramount for me. No society in human history has ever suffered because it has become too reasonable.
Tal Bachman wrote:to the extent that theism is, or could be, considered nothing more than a meme, to the same extent NON-theism is, or could be, considered nothing more than a meme.
I'm not going to get into "meme's" as I've stated earlier. If you would like to quantify this argument a little better, I'll be more than happy to respond. But you seem to be implying that non-theism is equally dogmatic as theism. This is silly, and easily refuted:
Sam Harris wrote: One doesn’t have to take anything on faith, or be otherwise dogmatic, to reject unjustified religious beliefs. As the historian Stephen Henry Roberts (1901-71) once said: “I contend that we are both atheists. I just believe in one fewer god than you do. When you understand why you dismiss all the other possible gods, you will understand why I dismiss yours.”
Tal Bachman wrote:But since both "religious" and "non-religious" belief systems can be more or less warranted by the evidence, I think NTs would be far better off focusing on "warranted versus unwarranted beliefs", period.
Russell took care of this. So did Sam Harris. A non-theist position is simply the rejection of an "unwarranted belief". It is not a belief in and of itself. It is the burden of the claimant to substantiate the claim, and since they can't, it is not adopted by the non-theist.
Tal Bachman wrote:Have you ever heard of the Stalinists? It wasn't all that long ago, GoodK. How can you leave out entire chunks of human history? Isn't that indicative of a dogma-inspired blindness itself?
Yes I have heard of Stalinists. Everytime a theist feels pressured to defend religion, I hear of him.
Like I said, none of these arguments are authentic.
And, no it is not indicative of a dogma-inspired blindness. In fact, I think your version of the events in question show a lack of historical objectivity. Perhaps indicative of a dogma inspired bias... ;)
Tal Bachman wrote:All this seems quite "sensible". And the whole sequence of reasoning is non-theist; it is humane, in its way; but...it has also led Roger to conclude that he should use pre-emptive violence against what seems to him to be a (or the) big, fat root of evil. Nor is this sort of thinking hypothetical.
Of course it doesn't seem sensible. Your hypothetical is ridiculous.
Bertrand Russell wrote:Many orthodox people speak as though it were the business of sceptics to disprove received dogmas rather than of dogmatists to prove them. This is, of course, a mistake. If I were to suggest that between the Earth and Mars there is a china teapot revolving about the sun in an elliptical orbit, nobody would be able to disprove my assertion provided I were careful to add that the teapot is too small to be revealed even by our most powerful telescopes. But if I were to go on to say that, since my assertion cannot be disproved, it is intolerable presumption on the part of human reason to doubt it, I should rightly be thought to be talking nonsense.
Tal Bachman wrote:That has absolutely nothing to do with anything I've written on this thread.
Oh I beg to differ my friend. The title of your post begins with the false presumption that non-theism is a belief system that can and is argued with "crudity". Russell simply points out the flawless logic in what you call non-theism.
I think I've covered just about everything.
Edited to add ROP's half-assed response:
RenegadeOfPhunk wrote:GoodK wrote:No one made this argument that you are arguing against. No one said the Bible is a representation of the concept of Theism as a whole.
Wow.
When I made the point, you told me that I was 'grasping at straws'.
Because you were. But did you forget that this was your point along the way?
The issue at the time was whether racism can be said to be 'deeply embedded' in theism.
You turned to the Bible to try and make your point.
Since it is conceded that the Bible isn't a representation of theism as a whole, your original point is now hung out to dry.
The Bible is
just one example - for Christianity and Judaism - and I made the point briefly because you were trying to make the thread about my use of non-racism as an example of a non-belief system. Start a new thread on racism and theism if you'd like.
I hope you don't interpret our ignoring your tangents as some sign of the strength of your argument. It's more likely the opposite.
Also, your statement to Marg about me doing nothing to address what you think the point is has been "hung out to dry".
Of course you do. Even though it is false.
Ummm... No it isn't. Theism always entails at least some Dogma. Always.
I don't expect reasoning to do any good on that point...
Translation: There isn't enough reason to support my statement.
(what's new)