- Mar 13, 2004
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sorry I apologize for calling your post childish. That was unnecessary. I edited that out of there. I don't want to make the same mistake other atheists are making here and allow it to become personal. However it does contain a lot more error than I can address in just the few minutes I have with you. I probably won't have time to address it. But if you made an abbreviate shortened version, I may be able to address that. Sorry about not having time to address all of that.No, I'm afraid you've forgotten what I said in post #496. Russell's Teapot. Bertrand Russell, the famous twentieth century philosopher, had encountered this "You have to believe I am right if you can't prove me wrong" argument, and countered it with What is Russell’s teapot?
If you want people to not understand you because you're speaking archaic English, go ahead. Don't expect anyone else to understand you or agree with you.
That is not true in the slightest. You're confusing "losing Christian privilege" with "being oppressed".
Yes, because they aren't "slanted towards humanism". You just made that up.
It's not a "humanist" word, it's a secular word (you may not be aware that "secular" does not mean "anti-Christian" or "biased against religion"; it means "religiously neutral"). In other words, it's just a neutral English word that describes something.
But another point is this: if you are not a humanist, why should you be allowed to define what humanists or atheists believe? (They are not at all the same thing, of course, but there is something of an overlap between the two groups). Would you like it if I rewrote the Bible and started to publish a new version?
Quote mining is a pretty good label for something that creationists are well-known for doing, taking quotes out of context in order to alter their meaning. It's a form of lying, which I understood was supposed to be against the Christian religion. And no, it's not "almost impossible to prove", it's extremely easy to prove. All you have to do is show the original quote in context to demonstrate how a quote-miner is taking it out of context. And whether you call it quote mining, falsehood-chopping or pizza-spreading, taking a quote of of context so that its meaning is changed is deceitful.
Well, if you insist on speaking seventeenth-century English to people, try not to be surprised if people have trouble understanding what you're trying to say.
You're mistaken about many things. Language changes as society changes. In this case, regarding the words "atheist" and "atheism" the change has been an improvement; it honours both what people think and reflects the etymology of the word; in short, the word now closer reflects reality. One again, if you were to construct a word to mean "person who lacks belief in God" a-theist is pretty much what you'd have to come up with.
But if you want to continue speaking in the seventeenth century, instead of English like the rest of us, be our guest. As for me, though, I'll decline your kind invitation to go back in time four hundred years.
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