sandwiches
Mas sabe el diablo por viejo que por diablo.
Fallacy of the excluded middle.
Tell that to dcyates, not quatona.
It's as Dostoyevsky wrote: if there is no God, anything goes.
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Fallacy of the excluded middle.
It's as Dostoyevsky wrote: if there is no God, anything goes.
Tell that to dcyates, not quatona.
And what would this excluded middle be; a demi-god?
Ok. Thanks for clarifying.Check sandwiches post. It's in reference to something dcyates posted.
Ok. Thanks for clarifying.
However, I fail to see how the Dostojevski quote was a fallacy of the excluded middle (or were you referencing to something else)?
I see a couple of fallacies in it (e.g. an argument from consequence), but not a tertium non datur.
I see.It's in reference to dcyates position apparently that either you seem to have Judeo/Christian moral ethic or blargh! chaos! Mad Max land.
So then you agree with the ethic that 'might makes right'?This atheist faces the fact that even with a God there exists no objective basis for morality.
That's specious reasoning, at best.And since the world very much looks like "anything goes" can we conclude that there is no God?
Whenever someone responds with "So you agree...?" or "So you are saying...?" I can predict with great certainty that they are going to superimpose their own paradigms on my statement, and that the result has nothing to do with what I say or agree with.)So then you agree with the ethic that 'might makes right'?
That's specious reasoning, at best.
No, you´ve changed the goalposts.1st premise: govts legislate laws
2nd premise: citizens routinely break those laws
Therefore: govts don't exist?!?
So then you agree with the ethic that 'might makes right'?
That's specious reasoning, at best.
1st premise: govts legislate laws
2nd premise: citizens routinely break those laws
Therefore: govts don't exist?!?
It's odd that I express my opinion? (I did begin that sentence with "Personally, I'm fairly convinced that....")As may be, however, since atheism has but a single defining characteristic your charge based on other characteristics seems rather odd.
I'm partial to the former option -- of which I don't have a problem with in the least. Yes, Almighty God, the Most High, the Creator of all that is, is the ultimate expression of might makes right.Yes, but you have one of two options as far as I can see with regards to God. The first being that God has decided morality, in which case it is just the ultimate expression of might makes right. The second being that there exists a morality that is external to God and he has simply passed it along to us.
Right. All the best, freest, wealthiest, and healthiest places in the world all share a significant Christian heritage. You think there are exceptions to that, name them. (I think it's odd that you didn't.)Wow, really? All the best, freest, and healthiest places on earth are based on a christian heritage? Except for the ones that are not in any way connected with a christian heritage but we will make excuses for those.![]()
Who said I was unbiased? Not me. Obviously I'm biased. So are you. So are all of us.Sorry but this just seems like a bunch of unsupported assertions to me. I think your conformation bias is showing.
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I wouldn't make the claim that in either ancient Judaism, or early Christianity, did women enjoy full equality with men. But compared to their lot elsewhere in the world, they certainly enjoyed an elevated status closer to it. In the Greco-Roman world, women were largely confined to the home (and to the inner rooms of the home, if possible), and when they were allowed out in public, they were always escorted and could only speak to a male through another male with whom they were in some regard embedded (i.e. a father, husband, brother, son). Only harlots spoke to men without some sort of male intermediary.im not so sure Judaism or Christianity weer ever about treating women as = to men
All due respect, blarg, but you're way off. Yes, Genesis indicates that it was specifically Eve who was deceived and enticed by the serpent to eat of the forbidden tree. But it's also careful to tell us that God had issued this proscription only to Adam BEFORE the creation of Eve; thus she got the instruction from Adam, but Adam had received it straight from the mouth of God. Additionally, although it's most often depicted as though Eve was off by herself when she was approached and deceived by the serpent, we're specifically told that, "(Eve) took from its fruit and ate and gave also to her husband beside her, and he ate" (Gen 3.6). In other words, Adam was there all along, passively silent! The result is reflected in the rest of the Bible where the blame for humanity's fall is always placed squarely on Adam's shoulders, not Eve's.genesis was quite clear early on that it was blaming women for all the worlds troubles and that women just existed to help man
Why should it suddenly bother men that half the human race were being left out of this purported "equality picture"? It certainly hadn't bothered them before. And why was it only in the Christian West that women came to enjoy anywhere near the same status as men?I though feminism rely got going when the idea that men should be treated like other men got developed and people stated making the reasonable observation that this was leaving half the human race out of the picture
It's odd that I express my opinion? (I did begin that sentence with "Personally, I'm fairly convinced that....")
Anyway, as Richard Weaver wrote, "Ideas have consequences," and a consequence of atheism is that it denies any objective moral standard
Do most atheists live consistent with that consequence? Considering the way they pass moral judgment on religion in general, Christianity in particular, and even God himself, no, they don't. They wish to deny the Judeo-Christian God, seemingly ignorant of the fact that without that God, the moral ethic by which they (try to) live and (delightfully) judge others wouldn't exist.
I'm partial to the former option -- of which I don't have a problem with in the least. Yes, Almighty God, the Most High, the Creator of all that is, is the ultimate expression of might makes right.
Right. All the best, freest, wealthiest, and healthiest places in the world all share a significant Christian heritage. You think there are exceptions to that, name them. (I think it's odd that you didn't.)
Who said I was unbiased? Not me. Obviously I'm biased. So are you. So are all of us.
I offered "a bunch" of unsupported assertions? Fine. Which ones? Let's discuss.

Of course morality exists without a god.... Got to love peoples who think if religion suddenly disappeared, everyone would go on a nihilistic killing spree....
So, no one can disagree with you about this and be a "true" atheist? There are atheists, such as myself, who would disagree with that claim on philosophical grounds.I gave the reason for my assertion (re: Nietzsche being the only true atheist); that he faced the fact more than any other atheist I've either read or heard of that without God there exists no objective basis for morality.
But this is not so. There is nothing about atheism that requires one to be an ethical nihilist. God isn't necessarily the only source of an "objective" ethical standard.It's as Dostoyevsky wrote: if there is no God, anything goes.
A rational being, and that's all I need to be to say so. This isn't a matter of "who" one is.If somebody more powerful, or more cunning, or more quick than somebody else can thus manage to bash them over the head and rob them blind, who are you to say he shouldn't?
Whether they would or wouldn't side with the attacker has no bearing on whether or not the attacker was in the right. Right isn't determined by law or majority.Sure, you might be able to get the proper authorities involved, but that's merely getting more powerful people to aid you. What if they don't want to? What if they decide to side with the attacker?
Law isn't determined by authority either, even if that authority is a deity. Are you certain that you aren't the one advocating "might makes right", but considering God to have all of the "might"?You can perhaps appeal to the very top authority: the president, the prime minister, the king, etc. But again, that's simply somebody more powerful yet.
You'll also note that those places that have a significant Christian heritage also have a significant Greek and Roman heritage. While Christianity does have its individualistic aspect, Greek democracy and Roman republicanism also had their individualistic aspect, and the Stoics preached human brotherhood. Christianity is not as unprecedented as you might think.On the other hand, it's again not by accident that all the best, freest, wealthiest, and healthiest places to live on the planet are those with a significant Christian heritage.
No, they don't. They want to prevent religion from hijacking the government and using it as a tool for converting others or forcing religious values on others.Most atheists want to remove religion from the public square
Oh, please. There are secular ethics in existence that aren't versions of "might makes right".I say, be careful what you wish for. Because if you get it, you'd better pray that either you're the most powerful guy around, or that the ethics of the guy who is just happens to closely mirror that of the Judeo-Christian ethic. (But then again, who would you be praying to?)