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Christian thoughts on atheism

Hentenza

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a·the·ist 
[ey-thee-ist]

–noun

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



Are you trying to say that there are no Christians, only Christianity?

Someone can't call themselves a Christian? The world will have to adopt and change everything to Christianity-following-individual?


Silly.

Not silly at all. An atheist, based on your definition above and the one that I posted, is someone who denies or disbelieves the existence of God. My contention is that one can not deny or disbelieve what they can not prove to not exist. It is illogical and a fallacy to attempt to do so.

There are Christians and Christianity. You can prove that using your senses.
 
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Non sequitur

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Not silly at all. An atheist, based on your definition above and the one that I posted, is someone who denies or disbelieves the existence of God.

First, your definition wasn't about "atheist", it was about "atheism".

Second, you just saying, "based on your definition above and the one I posted" is rather contradictory, because you never posted one and, also, said there was no such thing as one.

I'll take a leap of faith and assume you will actually address those two errors, before you continue.

My contention is that one can not deny or disbelieve what they can not prove to not exist. It is illogical and a fallacy to attempt to do so.

Ok.

Do you disbelieve that in leprechauns, unicorns or the Flying Spaghetti Monster exist?


By your definition:

If you do, you have to acknowledge their existence (and, personally, I would love to see your proof.)
If you don't, you are being illogical.
 
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solarwave

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Can or will your belief that Jesus died on your cross for all mankind's sins change to not believing that he did?

It is possible I would change my mind for one reason or another, but I hope I wont.

If I had the choice of picking any car and you had the choice of picking any model of Ford, my choice is more difficult to make.

I agree I guess.
 
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seashale76

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Do Christians think atheism is a belief system?

Do Christians think that atheists hate (their) god?

I think it is rather pointless to lump everyone together regarding who thinks what about whom.

Atheists reject a belief in God or gods. Belief system implies organization on the scale of a religious group- and that simply doesn't exist currently. Sure, you have atheist message boards, meet ups and whatnot, but that's just people searching their own kind out. Soviet Russia had a publication called Godless amongst other organized anti-theistic enterprises, but that sort of thing simply doesn't exist these days. If you mean atheists believe that there isn't such a thing as God or gods- then you could say it is a belief held by atheists.

Do Christians think that atheists hate their God? Some Christians surely do believe it. Personally, I think that such a position can only be attributed to some atheists. To say that you can't hate what you don't believe exists is somewhat of a copout when you have encountered people with a whole lot of hate for the very idea of God (whether or not they think He exists). I'd say most atheists are more apathetic agnostics than anything else- least the ones I personally know.
 
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pinkputter

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I hate to open a can of worms here....

but his struck me today, as maybe it has struck you too.

I think we all know Casey Anthony is guilty. Is that even a question? I think a huge reason the jury did not convict her is just that its gut-wrenching to sit in the same room as someone going through such an ordeal and order the death sentence on them, no matter what theyve done. I'm from Texas so if she was here she could kiss her freedom goodbye just like she did to her innocent daughter.

But look, you atheists give us christians the burden of proof all the time, just like the prosecution had for this murder trial. The strongest arguments are emotional, and even though they aren't all scientific the emotional arguments are usually the strongest. If you ask christians, they KNOW God exists, almost like we KNEW Casey Anthony was guilty here. Human intuition should not be pushed aside.

Atheists, I just wanted to ask, does emotion not weigh in in situations like this with Casey Anthony? No you can't convict some one on emotions alone, but you know someone is guilty by these red flags, and when you have evidence like a dead body, and cause of death, the emotions confirm the verdict. thoughts..
 
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Hentenza

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First, your definition wasn't about "atheist", it was about "atheism".

Second, you just saying, "based on your definition above and the one I posted" is rather contradictory, because you never posted one and, also, said there was no such thing as one.

I'll take a leap of faith and assume you will actually address those two errors, before you continue.

Fine. I have no problems with that. The definition of atheist and atheism is vastly different. lol


Ok.

Do you disbelieve that in leprechauns, unicorns or the Flying Spaghetti Monster exist?


By your definition:

If you do, you have to acknowledge their existence (and, personally, I would love to see your proof.)
If you don't, you are being illogical.

I have not made the case to disprove leprechauns, unicorns, or the ever infamous FSM. I don't identify myself as "A"leprechaun, or "A"unicorn or "A"fsm. You on the other hand identify yourself as "A"theist. That must then mean that you have logically disproven the existence of a deity, right?
 
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Beccs

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Hentenza

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No such thing as an atheist?

An atheist is someone who doesn't believe in deities.

Hi Beccs,

This forum is not for debate among Christians but to reply to questions posited by non Christians. Please become familiar with the statement of purpose for this forum (link). Thanks.
 
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pinkputter

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I don't know that she was guilty. The media was pretty shameful with their antics though. Emotions are terrible to go on- actually. They're fickle. I don't believe because of my emotions.

Oh come on....every interview anyone has done finds her guilty. The jury just wasn't aware (because they weren't allowed to) as much as we were due to all the extra coverage of the case we got from news.

I don't believe in God because of my emotions, just as I don't believe Casey Anthony is guilty because of emotions. I have to admit the Casey Anthony thing I am going off emotions more. And maybe that's why they didn't convict her. But what I am saying is emotions don't lie. They usually correlate with the truth.
 
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SonOfTheWest

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Fine. I have no problems with that. The definition of atheist and atheism is vastly different. lol




I have not made the case to disprove leprechauns, unicorns, or the ever infamous FSM. I don't identify myself as "A"leprechaun, or "A"unicorn or "A"fsm. You on the other hand identify yourself as "A"theist. That must then mean that you have logically disproven the existence of a deity, right?

Leprechauns, as a particular example of cultural folklore never really reached a level of worship(as far as faerie belief goes) to quite the same degree as deities have had. Though belief in faeries was fairly widespread in western Europe and was actually surprisingly prevalent even into if I remember correctly the 18th or 19th century. But for the few people who did stuff like leave a saucer of milk out for one...not really the level of belief as the belief in deities or to the level that peoples fought over them. To say nothing of the idea of unicorns. Gods have simply had a separate level of cultural influence and belief in them has had social effects that other beliefs have not had. To compare them at all is not historically or sociologically sound. As a result the social issues simply have not really existed to create situations for people to declare themselves say....aboggan-ists or araksha-ists.
 
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leftrightleftrightleft

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"you have a very specific view of God"

To me that reads, "you have a very specific view of "

I can't have a specific view of something that is not.

Did you know that Neils Bohr was a very vocal opponent of the existence of photons until 1925? Can you imagine if, in the famous Bohr-Einstein debates, Bohr had said to Einstein, "I have no view or opinion on this topic. Photons don't exist. They are not part of reality. To say that I have a specific view on photons is a meaningless statement." He would have been laughed out of the debate for claiming that he didn't have a view (opinion, sentiment, persuasion, conviction) on the reality of photons.

There are a wide variety of such debates in scientific history and on-going in which some groups in academia argue for the existence of one item while others argue that such an item does not exist.

Bohr–Einstein debates - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

You have a specific view on the reality of God. That's why you made this thread.

I believe you are talking about a theory.

A statement or opinion is something can either be proved or disproved, not facts.

fact   
[fakt]
–noun

- Something that actually exists; reality; truth
- A thing that is indisputably the case
- A truth known by actual experience or observation

Do you not realize that your reality, my reality, the scientific community's reality, everyone's reality is fluid?

By this definition there are no facts. Everything we believe via science today at one point overthrew a previous paradigm. Everything we believe via science today will likely be overthrown, shifted or re-shaped into new paradigms.

1. Something that actually exists; reality; truth. ---- What actually exists? What is reality? How do you know that which you see as reality is truly reality?

2. A thing that is indisputably the case. ----Nothing fulfills this definition except perhaps pure maths. You can give me the most basic and self-evident statement about reality and I can guarantee you it can be disputed.

3. A truth known by actual experience or observation -----Billions of people have experienced God. Also, what is the difference between "actual experience" and "experience". Why is that qualifier there?


There are no qualifiers or beliefs-to-hold for a demonstrable reality to "be". Reality exists, whether you choose to believe it or not.

You seem awfully sure that your own reality is the "the reality". I'm not sure if you or anyone else realizes the ironic hypocrisy of your statement.

What is reality for you? What you see with your senses? What you deduce via logic? What you extrapolate via induction?

You can't say my beliefs are I choose to not believe in something that doesn't exist.

To me belief is a synonym for opinion, view, sentiment etc. Free Dictionary agrees: opinion - definition of opinion by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia.

As such, as I discussed in the Bohr-Einstein debate, just as Bohr had the opinion/belief that photons did not exist, so you also have the belief that God does not exist.

And, I'd wager I know more about Christianity than you do.

Do you have any demonstrable proof for this claim? Or is it just a belief based on your own perceived intelligence, knowledge and superiority?
 
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leftrightleftrightleft

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An atheist arrives at their conclusion on gods based on what they know of them. What I know to currently be true can always change.

Might I remind you of the quote you stated later on in this thread: "Reality exists, whether you choose to believe it or not."

You seem quite dead-set on the fact that reality exists and you've got the eyes to see it while Christians or theists are blind to this "Reality" with a capital 'R'.

If you truly think you can change your ways then you must also be open to the idea that your reality (with a lower-case 'r') is wrong and not Reality.

My belief about the origin of life can change to something else.
My belief about the Christian God existing can change to believing in it.
My belief about anything can change.

This is a nice ideal to hold. But its a meaningless ideal. You are saying that you can believe anything so long as you are convinced that it is true.

This is basically a tautology. In other words, you are saying that you can be convinced to believe anything so long as you are convinced to believe it.

This is obvious. "I would believe in Satanism if I were convinced that Satanism was true". "I would believe in creationism if I were convinced it were true". "Your belief on the origin of life would change to something else if you were convinced that another option was true". These are all redundant and tautologous statements.

It actually makes no sense to say, "I wouldn't believe in Satanism if I were convinced that Satanism was true". Because, by definition, you don't believe something which you think is false.

Its an ideal which makes you seem very "open-minded" and holier-than-thou. But it doesn't mean anything.

Can or will your belief that Jesus died on your cross for all mankind's sins change to not believing that he did?

If yes, then you are unlimited in your ability to change.
If no, then you are limited in your ability to change.

Everyone should reply with a resounding YES!, so long as they were convinced.

One has the option to believe anything, and one has the option to believe anything, within a certain construct.


If I had the choice of picking any car and you had the choice of picking any model of Ford, my choice is more difficult to make.

So you think you are somehow bounded by fewer constructs? Sometimes I think a materialistic, logical, scientific reality is quite bounded and limited. You are missing out on a whole dimension of "potential reality" (or "Reality"?) by presupposing God's non-existence or, more broadly, the non-existence of the supernatural.
 
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Non sequitur

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I have not made the case to disprove leprechauns, unicorns, or the ever infamous FSM. I don't identify myself as "A"leprechaun, or "A"unicorn or "A"fsm. You on the other hand identify yourself as "A"theist. That must then mean that you have logically disproven the existence of a deity, right?

I didn't say you did.


Unicorns hold very a set of very specific traits. Resembles a horse, has a spiraling horn projecting from its forehead (and is often found hanging out in meadows with rainbows).

Atheists only have one (and are often not found hanging out in meadows with rainbows).

Difference.


If you would prefer to swap out "Odin" for leprechauns, unicorns or the Almighty FSM, feel free... but still answer the question.
 
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Non sequitur

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Did you know that Neils Bohr was a very vocal opponent of the existence of photons until 1925? Can you imagine if, in the famous Bohr-Einstein debates, Bohr had said to Einstein, "I have no view or opinion on this topic. Photons don't exist. They are not part of reality. To say that I have a specific view on photons is a meaningless statement." He would have been laughed out of the debate for claiming that he didn't have a view (opinion, sentiment, persuasion, conviction) on the reality of photons.

I see what you did there.

First, he said he has no view or opinion on something... and then gave his opinion.

I can see why he would have been laughed out for making contradictory claims.

You have a specific view on the reality of God. That's why you made this thread.

I made this thread to see what Christians views were on atheists. That first thing you said has no relevancy.

Do you not realize that your reality, my reality, the scientific community's reality, everyone's reality is fluid?

I wouldn't call them "mine", per se, as they are the scientific community's reality. The reality of demonstrable proof and data.

If you wish to hold views outside those, that's your right, but I wouldn't go equating science's views with "everyone's" and then saying, "We all exist in our own fluid reality."

By this definition there are no facts. Everything we believe via science today at one point overthrew a previous paradigm. Everything we believe via science today will likely be overthrown, shifted or re-shaped into new paradigms.

That's the best part. Things change to fit our current understanding.

Science says, "Here are the facts. What conclusions can we draw from it"?

Christianity says, "Here is the conclusion. What facts can we find to support it?"

3. A truth known by actual experience or observation -----Billions of people have experienced God.

Argumentum ad populum.

Also, what is the difference between "actual experience" and "experience". Why is that qualifier there?

Christians swap definitions around all the time. It was to try and separate.

"I hit my finger with the hammer." - Actual experience

"I felt something chilly pass over me and all the windows and doors were closed." - Experience

I can demonstrate and/or replicate an actual experience for you, by hitting your finger.

You can't demonstrate and/or replicate an experience for me, by chilly passing me.

You seem awfully sure that your own reality is the "the reality". I'm not sure if you or anyone else realizes the ironic hypocrisy of your statement.

My own reality is the state of things as they actually exist, rather than as they may appear or may be thought to be... which is the definition of "the reality".

("The" meaning, denoting one thing already mentioned or used to refer to a person, place, or thing that is unique.)

I see no hypocrisy or irony there.

To me belief is a synonym for opinion, view, sentiment etc. Free Dictionary agrees: opinion - definition of opinion by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia.

So you have opinion in the Christian God?

Ok.

I thought belief in the Christian God made you a Christian, not opinion in it.

Do you have any demonstrable proof for this claim? Or is it just a belief based on your own perceived intelligence, knowledge and superiority?

I have the same demonstrable proof you do :thumbsup:
 
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Non sequitur

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This is a nice ideal to hold. But its a meaningless ideal. You are saying that you can believe anything so long as you are convinced that it is true.

This is basically a tautology. In other words, you are saying that you can be convinced to believe anything so long as you are convinced to believe it.

This is obvious. "I would believe in Satanism if I were convinced that Satanism was true". "I would believe in creationism if I were convinced it were true". "Your belief on the origin of life would change to something else if you were convinced that another option was true". These are all redundant and tautologous statements.

It actually makes no sense to say, "I wouldn't believe in Satanism if I were convinced that Satanism was true". Because, by definition, you don't believe something which you think is false.

No, I'm saying I have the ability to accept anything so long as there is demonstrable proof for it.

Big difference in your summary of what I say, so everything you said past that, with that falsely as my premise is, isn't valid.

You are the one who is believes what you do, because you were convinced it was true, based on its circular logic.

So you think you are somehow bounded by fewer constructs? Sometimes I think a materialistic, logical, scientific reality is quite bounded and limited. You are missing out on a whole dimension of "potential reality" (or "Reality"?) by presupposing God's non-existence or, more broadly, the non-existence of the supernatural.

Materialistic, logical and scientific reality is quite bounded and limited.

The rest we call, "Unknown and not accepted, until proven."

While "potential reality" could be an similar definition, although it lends credence to gods being the explanation, it still is bound by the previous definition.

Its an ideal which makes you seem very "open-minded" and holier-than-thou. But it doesn't mean anything.

Reason and logic have an unintended tendency to do that.
 
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leftrightleftrightleft

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I see what you did there.

First, he said he has no view or opinion on something... and then gave his opinion.

I can see why he would have been laughed out for making contradictory claims.

I made this thread to see what Christians views were on atheists. That first thing you said has no relevancy.

You have a specific view or opinion on God. Just as Bohr had a specific view or opinion on photons. Both you and Bohr think that your respective objects of interest don't exist. That is your view.

If you had no opinion on the existence of God you would not have made this thread, you would not have joined this website and you would not have learned anything about Christianity. You would be opinionless and apathetic towards the subject. For example, I doubt you have tried to seek out forums devoted entirely to gojdiunnkzk because you have no opinion of gojdiunnkzk.

I wouldn't call them "mine", per se, as they are the scientific community's reality. The reality of demonstrable proof and data.

What if members of the scientific community disagree? The scientific community is far, far, far from homogeneous. You have your own reality and it is distinct from specific members of the scientific community. The scientific community's view of reality is based on the democratic notion that majority rules. You have put reality in a box of demonstrable proof and data and you BELIEVE that this is reality. Perhaps parts of reality can not be demonstrably proven. For example, can the subjective experience of love be demonstrably proven? How? Can consciousness be demonstrably proven? See Philosophical zombie - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Demonstrable proof" still has to be perceived and interpreted by somebody, namely you. You seem to think that the scientific method is perfectly objective in its interpretations of data. This is horribly false. People are involved, so it is not objective.

If you wish to hold views outside those, that's your right, but I wouldn't go equating science's views with "everyone's" and then saying, "We all exist in our own fluid reality."

I didn't equate science's views with everyone's. ??? :confused:

That's the best part. Things change to fit our current understanding.

Science says, "Here are the facts. What conclusions can we draw from it"?

Christianity says, "Here is the conclusion. What facts can we find to support it?"

This is the hallmark of science and is very useful as a tool for establishing functional theories. But, by the definition you gave of "facts", science does not have facts. I would more accurately reword your statement as:

"Science says, "Here are the observations and interpretations of data. What conclusions can we draw from it?""

Those interpretations of data can often change quite radically. And as such, the interpretation of the observations themselves can change. A good example is the realization of the wave-particle duality of matter. The moment an electron was noted to behave as a wave, the interpretation of an electron as a purely particle phenomena had to be shifted. The entire nature of how we do experiments and the implications of our experiments had to change. Did the "facts" change? You said yourself that a fact is "a thing that is indisputably the case." So obviously, science did not have the facts when it thought an electron was purely a particle. What makes you certain that science now has the true "facts" since discovering the wave-particle duality?

Christianity says, "Here is the conclusion. What facts can we find to support it?"

This is true of the Christian who has not really experienced anything that they would attribute to God. This is true of the Christian who was raised that way and applies the label due primarily to upbringing, culture or expectation. This is true of the Christian who believes what their parents tell them.

Believe it or not, I thought all Christians were like this. Then I got to know a bunch of Christians and realized that almost no Christians are like this. Most adult Christians have had intense experiences that cannot be justified by purely scientific materialism. These experiences are subjective but nonetheless they comprise the body of 'evidence' for which the Christian bases their faith.

No one wakes up one day with the conclusion, "God is real" and then sets about proving it. It is more likely that they have some sort of intense experiences (aka subjective evidence) that, to them, cannot be justified or adequately explained by strict materialism. After the experience, they may begin seeking God more actively in every day life. And often their experiences intensify and their conviction of the reality of God grows.


Argumentum ad populum.

This is a logical fallacy, I agree. But you said the definition of a fact was "a truth known by actual experience or observation." So your definition basically begged me to make the fallacy. What I said was not false: Billions of people have experienced or observed God and God's nature. The wording of your definition makes no mention of who needs to be making the observations and having the experiences.

I would suggest rewording your definition of "fact" to add the qualifier:

"3. a truth known by actual experience or observation by my own senses"

OR perhaps

"3. a truth known by actual experience or observation by the scientific community. "

This rewording gets rid of the nasty thing known as subjective testimony. But the first option it also leads to all sorts of problems in that anything's existence can be questioned so long as the subjective observer (you) has not experienced it.

The second option assumes the scientific community to be objective, trustworthy, unbiased, objective and without an agenda. And if you are being honest and if you know anything about research and funding, then you know that the scientific community can get nasty when it comes to getting funding. And usually funding does not continue if you repeatedly get no results. This is an impetus for a researcher to get results. Perhaps even 'skewed results'.


Christians swap definitions around all the time. It was to try and separate.

"I hit my finger with the hammer." - Actual experience

"I felt something chilly pass over me and all the windows and doors were closed." - Experience

I can demonstrate and/or replicate an actual experience for you, by hitting your finger.

You can't demonstrate and/or replicate an experience for me, by chilly passing me.

First of all, your hammer example involves a physical object and pain receptors. The second example involves a (potential) non-physical entity and an emotional response.

Lets say I love my spouse very much. I love her to bits. But you don't love her. And I cannot, by any means, replicate this love for her to you. There is no way I can demonstrate and/or replicate my experience of my wife to you. So this is no longer an "actual experience"?

If that's your definition then so-be-it. But I must say its a strange definition because emotional experiences are rarely repeatable.

My own reality is the state of things as they actually exist, rather than as they may appear or may be thought to be... which is the definition of "the reality".

("The" meaning, denoting one thing already mentioned or used to refer to a person, place, or thing that is unique.)

I see no hypocrisy or irony there.

The hypocrisy is that you demand people to provide evidence of their reality while presupposing that your own reality is the "state of things as they actually exist".

Here is my counter argument: My reality is the state of things as they actually exist, rather than as they may appear or may be thought to be. Therefore, you are wrong.

Good logic, right? (**sarcasm**)

You are not exempt from the "rather than as they may appear or may be thought to be" qualifier. The way you perceive the world may appear one way but that may not be the correct way. You are not objective (I feel like I've said that several times to you).

You are not objective. You are not objective. You are not objective. Do you think you are?

So you have opinion in the Christian God?

Ok.

I thought belief in the Christian God made you a Christian, not opinion in it.

First of all, I'm not a Christian. Secondly, this is where language becomes really sticky an ambiguous. Because, I guess what you point out is a valid point.

I would say belief is a synonym for opinion.
But, as you say, I guess belief is also a synonym for faith.
But I definitely don't think opinion is a synonym for faith.

Lets just get rid of the word "belief" entirely then to make the discussion more clear. Can we agree that both of us have an opinion on God? And can we also agree that I have faith in God while you do not?

The word "belief" no longer appears in this response except for the four instances above.

I have the same demonstrable proof you do :thumbsup:

I'm not sure what you mean. Your comment about knowing more about Christianity than another poster was a totally baseless claim. That poster may be a professor of theology for all you know. He may have a PhD in philosophy or religion and may have spent 40 years learning about Christianity. Why did you make this assumption that you had a greater knowledge and intelligence with regard to Christianity? Why did you make a baseless statement which assumed your superiority and his inferiority with regards to Christianity?

My comment back to you which you have just quoted was not baseless. Please reply to my questions rather than evading your rude comment which assumed a greater knowledge of Christianity than that of another poster.

(Btw, that poster is actually very knowledgeable about Christianity.)
 
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leftrightleftrightleft

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No, I'm saying I have the ability to accept anything so long as there is demonstrable proof for it.

Big difference in your summary of what I say, so everything you said past that, with that falsely as my premise is, isn't valid.

Hmm, then you are even less open to change than I thought! Some things can not be demonstrably proven. My love for my spouse being an example. Most emotions can not be demonstrably proven. God is experienced via emotions. So you will never be convinced of God because God cannot be demonstrably proven to your standard.

You have set your standard on what reality is and that standard is your box.

"The man who cannot believe his senses, and the man who cannot believe anything else, are both insane, but their insanity is proved not by any error in their argument, but by the manifest mistake of their whole lives. They have both locked themselves up in two boxes, painted inside with the sun and stars; they are both unable to get out, the one into the health and happiness of heaven, the other even into the health and happiness of the earth" --GK Chesterton

Interestingly, you fit into the latter category of someone who believes only his senses while I fit into the former category of someone who struggles to believe his senses. The only way I can believe in God is if I believe my senses, because my subjective experiences tell me there is a God despite it being logically impossible to prove his existence. The only way you can believe in God is if you don't believe only your senses and instead become open to the possibility that not everything you experience is due to solely neurological chemicals and biochemical reactions.

You are the one who is believes what you do, because you were convinced it was true, based on its circular logic.

I believe what I do because I was convinced it was true. Yes. I agree.

You believe what you do because you were also convinced it was true! How can you argue otherwise? How can you turn this phrase any other way and have it make sense?

"You don't believe what you do because you were convinced it was true." --nonsensical

"You believe what you do because you were convinced it was false." --nonsensical

"You do not believe what you do because you were convinced it was false." --I suppose this is just the negative of the original and kind of makes sense but in a slightly convoluted way.

Your standard of what convinces you might be different from mine. The only thing that will convince you of something is demonstrable proof. I also am convinced by demonstrable proof, but I am also convinced by subjective experience and to some degree by testimony. I haven't quite figured out or solidified my standard for what could convince me of something.

Materialistic, logical and scientific reality is quite bounded and limited.

Then why did you make the analogy between a Christian choosing from only Ford's while you can choose from any brand of cars?

The rest we call, "Unknown and not accepted, until proven."

While "potential reality" could be an similar definition, although it lends credence to gods being the explanation, it still is bound by the previous definition.

This is reasonable, I think.



Reason and logic have an unintended tendency to do that.[/QUOTE]
 
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You'll have to excuse my cherry-picking of the replies. I just spend 30 minutes having to respond to every statement someone said and, quite honestly, It's rather draining.

For example, the above title of the thread, "Christian thoughts on atheism". I'd estimate that 80% of the material here is not related to that question.

It's a whole lot of derailing, so I'm gonna try and either re-rail it or jump off the train when the ride is no longer fun.

What if members of the scientific community disagree?

When the secular scientific community disagrees, I guess I'll deal with it then.

"Demonstrable proof" still has to be perceived and interpreted by somebody, namely you.

Of course it does.

It also has to be able to be perceived and interpreted by everybody else before it really becomes demonstrable proof.

You seem to think that the scientific method is perfectly objective in its interpretations of data. This is horribly false. People are involved, so it is not objective.

Never said that I do.

Subjective as it ever was, science agreed on the law of gravitation, because we can all test it out if we want to.

This is the hallmark of science and is very useful as a tool for establishing functional theories. But, by the definition you gave of "facts", science does not have facts. I would more accurately reword your statement as:

"Science says, "Here are the observations and interpretations of data. What conclusions can we draw from it?""

So, then, Christians say, "Here is the conclusion, what observations and interpretations of data can we find to support it?"

First of all, your hammer example involves a physical object and pain receptors. The second example involves a (potential) non-physical entity and an emotional response.

Sure does.

One you can prove, one you can not.

Lets say I love my spouse very much. I love her to bits. But you don't love her. And I cannot, by any means, replicate this love for her to you. There is no way I can demonstrate and/or replicate my experience of my wife to you. So this is no longer an "actual experience"?

It sure is your own actual experience.

It's a pity that God can't demonstrate himself in any other ways than love... oh wait, he can, he just said he won't.

Fear not, he explained why he won't, so you're covered. No moving mountain or making things disappear and reappear, in front of a massive crows of believers and non-believers.

His circular logic treats him well.

The hypocrisy is that you demand people to provide evidence of their reality while presupposing that your own reality is the "state of things as they actually exist".

Hypocritical or not, it makes no difference.

How about you prove yours?


Remember that kid in grade school? The conversation went something like this:

1st kid - "You're a gonorrhea!"
2nd kid - "No, you are!"
1st kid - "You don't even know what that means!"
2nd kid - "Oh yeah, well what is it?"
1st kid - "I don't have to tell you!"

Either the 1st kid does know, but won't tell or doesn't know.

Same goes for the 2nd.

And nobody proved anything.

(I swear, if you avoid this by saying something similar to "kids say such mean things" or make some social commentary related to religion, I'm gonna be sick...)

Your comment about knowing more about Christianity than another poster was a totally baseless claim. That poster may be a professor of theology for all you know. He may have a PhD in philosophy or religion and may have spent 40 years learning about Christianity. Why did you make this assumption that you had a greater knowledge and intelligence with regard to Christianity? Why did you make a baseless statement which assumed your superiority and his inferiority with regards to Christianity?

Totally.

Then again, I hear a lot of assertive and baseless claims myself.

More curious as to how it would have panned out.
 
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Then why did you make the analogy between a Christian choosing from only Ford's while you can choose from any brand of cars?

Someone was comparing the difficulty of being a Christian vs the difficulty of being an atheist.
 
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