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stiggywiggy

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Does REASON have a place here? I know of no one who ever claims to have experienced a transcendent fairy, yet I know that there are millions who claim to have experienced a transcendent Holy Spirit. Should my lack of metaphysical certitude about this, lead me to give equal weight to both testimonies, i.e. ZERO, since I cannot empirically verify those testimonies?

I would be a fool to do so. And yet dawkins-style atheists seem to say that they have the same absolute certitude about the non-existence of God as they do about the non-existence of three-headed purple unicorns.
 
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juvenissun

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That is what I mean. I think when an atheist starts to accept the existence of ghost, six-sense, spirit type of thing, then he is not an atheist any more.

So to me, atheism is the same as materialism.
 
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stiggywiggy

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One can't prove it either. Which leaves the atheist....where? Right where he started. But how can you disbelieve in Zeus if you can't prove he doesn't exist? You have to be agnostic, like you said.

I have never met anyone who claims to have experienced the reality of Zeus. And yet we have both met hundreds who claim to have experienced the reality of Jesus Christ. Should both testimonies be given equal weight, i.e. ZERO, when contemplating the POSSIBILITY that there might be a realm that transcends the empirical?
 
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juvenissun

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You can hold exactly the same attitude toward any spiritual beings, includes God. So, if an atheist believed in ghost and expected that science would discover some concrete evidences of ghost "in the future", then why wouldn't the atheist also believe in God?
 
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hollyda

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What about all those who experience the "reality" of religions outside Christianity? Do you choose to ignore those? Or is there some loophole that disqualifies them from meeting your standards?
 
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stiggywiggy

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Exactly. It is senseless because it cannot be done. And one is only "obligated" to do so, if he expects anyone to take his disbelief seriously when appealing to lack of empirical verification, as Dawkins does.

So Dawkins is obligated, but he can't pull it off.
 
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hollyda

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That's a good question...and likewise the reason I stopped believing in the authenticity of ghost stories when I became an atheist. I'm not closed to the possibility, and would love to be proven wrong, but I don't believe in ghosts.

That's not to say someone can't have a paranormal experience. In fact, the experience can seem very "para" and real to the person involved, but having listened to more than one Joe Nickel discussion, I remain unconvinced there isn't a very normal explanation for those things that seem extra-para.

For those skeptics/non-believers who do believe in ghosts, you'd have to ask them directly to explain their motives. I'd be interested in the answer.
 
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Cabal

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What about all those who experience the "reality" of religions outside Christianity? Do you choose to ignore those? Or is there some loophole that disqualifies them from meeting your standards?

I suspect a difference is being drawn between religions currently practised and no-longer practised religions. Can't say I necessarily agree with the point though - greek polytheism was contemporaneous with Christianity at one point, and I can't say that something becomes "less true" as its number of adherents decline.
 
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hollyda

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I listened to Dan Barker once discuss speaking in tongues. He said when he was an evangelical, he'd experience a euphoric rush while speaking in tongues that triggered some sort of pleasure sensor as a religious experience.

In fact, I was moved to dig up a quote.

On the reality of spiritual experiences

 
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hollyda

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No, that would be foolish. To IGNORE the testimonies of millions about anything is just downright idiotic, in fact.

Even if someone else's testimony conflicts with yours? Does that make it less trustworthy?

I can give you a testimony about my departure from the church, and I'm hardly the only atheist who was once a Christian.
 
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Cabal

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I wasn't really getting at the nature of religious experience myself, more addressing the idea that making points about non-belief in religions no longer widely adhered to is not necessarily irrelevant in a discussion on non-belief.

But interesting quote nonetheless. I wouldn't say religious experiences they aren't real experience - they are certainly perceived, but they are not necessarily always handled consistently compared to other unusual experiences. In every other case a local physiological sensation/experience would be attributed to a local physiological cause as an initial explanation, but attributing it to a transcendent deity tickling your brain is just leaping light-years off to the conclusion you already wanted.

Quite interesting that the person could reproduce things like tongues though, most interesting indeed. I wonder if it's somewhat of an indictment of Christianity that it is so easy to outwardly fake the characteristics of a believer.
 
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stiggywiggy

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Even if someone else's testimony conflicts with yours? Does that make it less trustworthy?

I can give you a testimony about my departure from the church, and I'm hardly the only atheist who was once a Christian.

That's irrelevant. What you CANNOT do is is give testimony about your experience within a realm that transcends the empirical. Millions and millions do. You do not.

You may believe these people are deceived but you are unable to prove it.
 
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Cabal

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Even if someone else's testimony conflicts with yours? Does that make it less trustworthy?

I can give you a testimony about my departure from the church, and I'm hardly the only atheist who was once a Christian.

I think also that some itt are operating under a misapprehension that we just ignore testimony. I don't, for one. The difference is I opened my eyes and saw that testimonies had similar characteristics and claims and levels of supporting evidence regardless of which religion they occurred under. Such commonality means they simply cannot be used to determine the validity of a religion. It's like saying that a true religion contains people who have skin. It is completely useless for telling you anything about the religion because it's true for all of them, so it cannot be proof of the validity of any of them.

So testimony is not ignored, far from it.
 
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hollyda

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I understood what you meant; my response was a sloppy transition from "dead religions" to people who have moved on from contemporary religions. How the experience a practitioner of a dead religion might have had relates to that of, well, Dan Barker, or others like him. If that sentiment could be reproduced, even without the conviction of the belief.

I think what Barker was saying was not necessarily an indictment of Christianity, more that those who say they have had religious experiences aren't necessarily deceived in what they experienced, but classifying it as something singular to a belief when indeed anyone can experience it and classify it as something else.
 
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hollyda

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That's irrelevant. What you CANNOT do is is give testimony about your experience within a realm that transcends the empirical. Millions and millions do. You do not.

You may believe these people are deceived but you are unable to prove it.

And you are unable to prove they are not. So we're back at the beginning. I don't claim there is no god. I just don't believe it. You can't prove there is a god, but you believe there is.
 
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hollyda

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Also accurate. Not believed =//= ignored.
 
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stiggywiggy

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And you are unable to prove they are not. So we're back at the beginning. I don't claim there is no god. I just don't believe it. You can't prove there is a god, but you believe there is.

Since you don't claim there is no god, my remarks were not directed toward you, but rather toward ATHEISTS, who by definition claim there is no god. If you've ever met an atheist who does NOT claim there is no God, he is a walking oxymoron.
 
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Cabal

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Since you don't claim there is no god, my remarks were not directed toward you, but rather toward ATHEISTS, who by definition claim there is no god. If you've ever met an atheist who does NOT claim there is no God, he is a walking oxymoron.

Nope, you just need to realise there is more than one kind of atheist besides strong atheism, which is the kind containing a definite assertion that no Gods exist.

Negative and positive atheism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Edit: Out of curiosity, are you actually reading posts before you respond to them?

That's a good question...and likewise the reason I stopped believing in the authenticity of ghost stories when I became an atheist.

Emphasis mine.
 
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hollyda

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Since you don't claim there is no god, my remarks were not directed toward you, but rather toward ATHEISTS, who by definition claim there is no god. If you've ever met an atheist who does NOT claim there is no God, he is a walking oxymoron.

Since you invoked the word "definition", I believe you are in need of a visit from my friend, the dictionary.

a·the·ist 
noun
a person who denies or disbelieves the existence of a supreme being or beings.

A person can be a strong atheist or a weak atheist. I am the latter. This makes me an agnostic atheist. I don't know whether or not there is a god, but I don't believe there is. It hardly disqualifies me from being an atheist.

So perhaps you need to broaden your understanding of atheism.
 
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