You are remarkably selective in which of my arguments you choose to respond to and which you choose to ignore. I will not speculate on your reasons.
First, I'll respond to the statements in your last; and then we'll take another look at the issues which you have avoided. Should be interesting.
---
Cephus wrote:cnorman18 wrote:And we do. Some people build their lives around such things. They are called "artists."
Yes, but artists don't look at these things and think they're real. We have another word for people who do take these imaginary things seriously. We call them "insane".
You miss the point. The ideas that lie behind the metaphors, symbols, and fictional characters and events that artists create--and which are the reason they create them--are quite real, and I would say that they take them very seriously indeed. The same can be said of theists who study the Bible but do not read it literally.
Once again, you betray your devotion to the stereotype that all theists are literalists and think of God in the simpleminded way that you think we do.
If you have read my other posts, you know that I do not claim and have never claimed that the existence of God is an objective, provable and/or verifiable fact.
Which is just a convenient dodge for getting out of backing up your claims. I'm sure that would have worked for Pons and Fleishman and their claims of cold fusion. "Yes, it works, but we never claimed it is objective, provable and/or verifiable!" If it is none of those things, what's the point in believing in it at all?
If there was ever a false analogy, that's it. Cold fusion exists, or does not exist, as an objectively verifiable process involving concrete objects in a specific time and place. It is provable and verifiable. Denying any of those things would be silly and futile.
The God-concept is none of those things. It is not provable or verifiable, as you have implicitly admitted when you said God's existence cannot be disproven.
Are you insisting that I prove something that we both agree cannot be proven? What possible point would there be in making such a demand? Perhaps that is only a convenient dodge for getting out of even considering, let alone refuting, the idea that there are other orders of belief than the objective, literal, and concrete.
I am not convinced that they are not true.
Rational people do not simply believe everything they are not convinced are not true...
No more do I. "Everything"? Strawman again.
...they actually believe things that they are convinced, by logic, evidence and reason, that *ARE* true.
In terms of concrete objects and processes in the temporal world--like cold fusion--certainly. In terms of metaphysical concepts and other such non-concrete beliefs, not necessarily.
Here is a formulation that might help you understand where I'm coming from. My own religious belief is a kind of
speculation; "The heart, the meaning, of this body of thought, ethics, and metaphysical understandings of the nature of the Universe might be a valid and coherent way of looking at the world; I shall explore it and live my life as if I were sure of its truth."
Notice that I speak of the heart and meaning of that body of thought, not the literal and historical truth of the stories used to teach it.
Now, that approach makes no claims of proof; it certainly doesn't lend itself to trying to convince others of its objective truth; and it isn't, it seems to me, irrational.
Call it a provisional belief, rather like the opposite of weak atheism: I see no hard evidence that there is no God, and plenty of subjective, internal evidence, probative only to me, that there is; and so I choose to believe until my belief is proven false. Like the weak atheist, I am open to changing my mind (and may be doing so as we speak).
What about God, anyway? One of the things you don't acknowledge here is that belief in God is not necessarily a belief in a 'bearded Grandfather in the sky," an invisible Superbeing, or any of the other stereotypes which are the only ones you allow as possible ways to believe in Him.
We Jews don't claim to know or understand the nature of God; as I've written before, God is the
Ein Sof, the Totally Other, unknowable and incomprehensible. Is he a discrete and distinct entity at all? Might He be something like Tillich's "Ground of Being," or a Universal Mind, or something we cannot conceive at all? I dunno. But for sure he's not the kind of cartoon Grandpa-in-the clouds that you seem to think I have in mind. (That many theists believe just that, I do not deny, or even that some of them are Jews; but that's not my problem.)
I may coming around to a different view in light of my remarks on the origin of the Torah on another thread; since I think that God had no direct part in the formation of the Bible, but that it was the product of human thought--and, indeed, that the only voice that God has or has ever had is our own--and that humans have more projected or injected or imposed meaning and authority on that book than found them there as intrinsic to it--perhaps, in some sense, God is the same. There is, or may be, a God; but if there is, He is unknowable, and the God-concept that is held by organized religions is more the creation of men than the other way around.
Thought continues, and the ideas are half-baked thus far; but as you see, I'm rather a long way from the kind of theist you (rightly) find primitive and benighted.
Does any of that help at all, or am I still an irrational moron?
Your position is no more objectively provable than mine, though you seem to think so.
My position is that your claims for the existence of God are unsubstantiated, therefore there is no rational reason to take them seriously. My position is absolutely objectively provable. Try again.
The only claim I have ever made is that I hold a subjective and unverifiable belief, as described above, that may or may not be objectively true.
There are some of us who think there is, or at least may be, more to "reality" than objective, proven facts.
No, there are some who *WISH* there was, it's purely an emotional position, not a rational one. You don't want to feel like you're all alone in the universe, you want to feel comforted that there's an invisible friend in the sky that's watching out for you. You want to feel special because you have this "relationship" with the supposed creator of the universe. None of these are rational reasons for actually accepting this position. What you're doing is little more than holding a security blanket and sucking your thumb because you think that somehow it'll make you safer and more secure.
Can I note for the record that you are here claiming a supernatural power, i.e., that of being able to read my mind?
You are once again attributing to me simplistic and, yes, irrational beliefs that I deny that I hold. Perhaps you'd care to try to prove those positive claims.
Where, in all the rules of this forum, of logic, of science, or of rationality, does it say that you have the right to tell me what I think?
First, what you state in the above paragraph is inarguably a "strong atheist" point of view, which you deny below that you hold. If the assertion that a belief in God has not "the slightest possibility of being true" is not a strong-atheist position, what would a strong-atheist position look like?
A strong atheist rejects the possibility that god(s) exist, a weak atheist simply lacks belief in god(s) because there is no good evidence to accept it. If you want to do a word substitution, there is a difference between someone who rejects the possibility of Bigfoot and someone who simply sees no good reason to think Bigfoot is real. One is open to changing their mind, one is not. Lack of belief, as a weak atheist, is not the same as belief in the lack of existence, as a strong atheist.
Come on, are you telling me you've been on these forums all this time and you still don't know this?
I know of the differences between those positions, of course; but I had never seen them explained together with those labels. In my discussions with Zzyzx, he takes what you call the "weak atheist" position and calls it "non-theist," which I accept. I had assumed, I see wrongly, that a "weak atheist" says "there is no God," with no particular reference to the possibility of changing his mind, and a strong atheist says, "no God is possible." I may have been off a bit, but I was pretty close.
I admit I haven't spent a lot of time or effort meditating on the distinctions, since I hold none of those positions. The definitions you give here seem to be the most logical and accurate, especially the one that clarifies agnosticism as "not only do I not know, I
cannot know." Thanks.
But to return to the point of all this: Are you a strong atheist, or not? From your words in your last post and your definitions here, it would appear that you are.
I have no problem with that; I just wonder why you denied it.
I freely acknowledge that, as objective fact, I do not know for certain that there is a God.
Then you must also freely acknowledge that you have no rational reason to believe that there is a God either.
But I've already said that. I regard my belief as
non-rational and subjectively based, as opposed to
irrational, contrary to and contradicted by rationality.
This is a cheap theistic dodge.
I regard it as a different way of looking at the kinds of belief that people may hold. You may not agree, but you certainly have no warrant to accuse me of lying about it.
If you can't demonstrate that your beliefs are true of valid, STOP MAKING THE CLAIM THAT THEY ARE!
Show me where I ever have.
I do not, and have never, claimed that my beliefs are objectively true. You are not the first atheist that has had trouble getting his head around that concept, but that doesn't mean either that I am lying about the way I perceive and understand what I think, or that my way of understanding these issues is wrong.
It is blatantly dishonest to repeatedly claim that what you believe is true and then, when backed into a corner, say "but I can't prove it and never said I could".
Again; "true" and "may be true" are two different things, just as a fact is different from an opinion.
I realize that most theists, especially here, do not think, nor believe, nor express themselves in this way. I am not among their number. Get over it.
The way I learned it, I get to think, believe, understand and speak as I choose, not as other people think that I should, whether they be theists or atheists.
The absence of evidence is not evidence of absence, to coin a phrase. You are again claiming an objective, proven fact where none has been demonstrated.
You can't read well, can you? I said that there was no objective evidence and in that, I'm absolutely right, you even agree with me. You really need to stop sticking your foot in your mouth.
If you had said only that there was no evidence, and stopped there, you would be quite right; but you haven't been doing that. You have been saying, and very consistently, that there is no evidence,
and therefore there is no God nor the slightest possibility of His existence. That does not follow logically, that is what I am disputing, and you know both of those things.
My beliefs are intellectually based, and have to be, because I am incapable of emotional bonding to anyone or anything, including a religion.
If they were intellectually based, you'd be able to support them intellectually, which you have utterly failed to do.
I disagree. My only claim is that I hold an unverifiable, unprovable, provisional, and subjective belief. Again, the fact that you don't understand how, or recognize that, such a thing could be doesn't mean that it doesn't exist. I say that it does, and that I hold such a belief, and you have absolutely no reason to claim, and most certainly cannot prove, that it doesn't and I don't.
You cannot come to a reasonable belief in the existence of the supernatural intellectually, it just can't be done because there is no evidence whatsoever that would lead you there.
The word you are looking for there is "logically," not "intellectually." They are not the same thing. Once again; you don't get to tell me, or anyone else, how to think.
You *WANT* there to be a supernatural, you *WISH* there was a supernatural, you *FEEL BETTER* thinking there is a supernatural, therefore you believe in one.
Mindreading again? How supernaturally gifted you are.
You might reflect on the fact that, excepting only the bare existence of an all but entirely undefined God, I do not accept the reality of any supernatural phenomena whatever. None. Zero. Nada. Zip. I don't even believe in the existence of a human soul that is separate from the body and brain. How does all that factor into my supposed wants and needs?
The fact remains, from a purely intellectual basis, there is no reason for thinking that the supernatural actually exists.
Which is why I don't believe in it. God, I place in a different category, as I hope by now you have grasped. More precisely, I don't know if God fits any categories at all. Can the ultimate source of natural law be "supernatural"? Beats me.
Like many atheists, you insist on faulty and false, not to mention calculatedly insulting, analogies.
No, they're very accurate analogies, you simply don't like having the ridiculous nature of your beliefs pointed out.
If I believed as you insist that I must, you would be right; my beliefs would be both analogous to unicorns, etc., and ridiculous. But I don't.
Belief in things without a shred of objective evidence is ridiculous, whether it's ghosts, aliens, Bigfoot or God. You just single one of those words out for special treatment. Ain't gonna fly, my friend.
And you, as always, assume that my beliefs are essentially the same as those of fundamentalists. That ain't even gonna
walk.
I think "says you" about covers it here. I don't agree. Can you provide some objective evidence to convince me of that, other than your bald assertions?
Agreeing is irrelevant. If you disagree, prove it. Show that God is actually an objectively better explanation for what we see around us. Oh wait, you can't prove anything objectively, can you?
Good. You are beginning to get it. Unless you're being sarcastic, of course....
Wait a minute. This example was given to address your contention that no thought about something that isn't real could be rational. That Gandalf and the hobbits aren't real is central to my point; even if God isn't real, thought and writing about him aren't necessarily irrational. You are here conceding that point.
Belief that god(s) are real is central to theism, if you don't believe in the existence of god(s), you're not a theist. Are you suggesting that Jewish rabbis don't think that God is real? What's the point of the stupid hat and hairdo and all the pathetic bowing and scraping if God isn't real?
And here I was thinking you were better than this. Guess not.
Yeah, I thought you were better than that too.
Let me spell out the argument, step by step:
1. You said that no thought about anything that isn't real could possibly be rational.
2. I gave the Tolkien example to show that that is not true.
3. The point was, clearly, that thought about God,
even if He isn't real, could still be rational.
I was in no way suggesting that rabbis, or any other theists, think that God isn't real. The point was about rational thought, not God.
Were you really unable to follow that simple line of reasoning, or were you deliberately twisting it to score a fake point?
Excuse me, but I don't do that. Few modern, liberal theists, whether Christian or Jewish, do.
Actually, they do, at least in part. There are a lot of parts in the later Old Testament that likely are historically accurate, but they have nothing to do with the supernatural, they are just a recording of ancient Jewish history.
Give me a break. Those weren't the parts that either of us were talking about, and you know it.
Your problem is with theists who read the miraculous and supernatural accounts in the Bible as literally and historically true. You know that, and so do I. I told you, and will be most happy to prove, that few modern, liberal Jews "do that," as I don't. You are blatantly dodging the point here, and you MUST know that.
And you accuse ME of being dishonest?
Do you have any arguments that are actually about modern religion as it is actually practiced, or only about strawmen, caricatures and fundamentalism?
Do you have any arguments that would differentiate liberal theology from these things? Certainly, there might not be as much silly ritual, but the basic beliefs are still as irrational and illogical, you just don't dress up in robes and swing a lightsaber.
Let the record first show that you did not answer the question.
As for "arguments that would differentiate liberal theology from" strawmen, caricatures and fundamentalism--how long a list do you want?
1. No belief in the literal, historical truth of Scripture.
2. No resistance to science, e.g., evolution.
3. No doctrine of a literal fiery Hell.
4. No doctrine that only the proper belief in Jesus will save one from that Hell.
5. No insistence that all other religions are 100% false and likewise doom their believers to Hell.
6. No insistence on one, single, correct and acceptable interpretation of the Bible.
7. No insistence on one, single, correct and acceptable understanding of the nature of God.
8. No insistence on one, single, correct and acceptable detailed code of moral behavior.
9. No insistence that the Bible is the "Inerrant Word of God."
10. No refusal to acknowledge the multiple and cross-cultural origins of the Bible, e.g., the J, E, D, and Priestly sources and the influence of documents from other ancient cultures and religions.
11. No emphasis on proselytization and evangelism.
12. No appeals to primitive emotions and induced mass euphoria, as in many "crusades" and "revivals."
13. No "pat answers" and simple solutions to personal problems.
14. No allegations that Jesus will solve all one's problems if one only accepts him as one's "personal savior."
15. No interest whatever in supernatural phenomena, e.g., "faith healing," "gifts of the Spirit," prophecy, visions, speaking in tongues, etc.
16. No lockstep, unquestioning obedience and reverence paid to any living human as a Great Spiritual Leader or Teacher.
17. No insistence that one must be "filled with the Spirit," "spiritually awake," or some such in order to properly understand the Bible, be "saved," or whatever.
18. No insistence that the "Last Days" are upon us.
19. No insistence that any one culture or nation, like the US, is ordained by God to be the leader, greatest power, best, holiest, most Christian, or whatever, in the world.
20. No teachings about a personal, actual, literal Devil or Satan, or demons and evil spirits.
21. No teachings about a genuine, literal,
personal relationship with or access to God.
22. No teachings about how God can be manipulated or induced to give "blessings" through special prayers or devotions or otherwise be controlled.
23. No denunciations of those who believe differently, or not at all, as agents of evil or Satan.
24. No denunciations of those who believe differently, or not at all, as being intentionally obstinate and clinging to Sin.
25. NO SIMPLISTIC BELIEF IN GOD AS A BENEVOLENT OLD MAN IN THE SKY.
Shall I go on? I certainly could.
Now, as I asked in the first place: do you have arguments that address a faith or belief that includes none of these?
Even if God does not exist, it is possible to think and talk about Him without necessarily being irrational.
Depends on the context. I can think and talk about Harry Potter in the context of a literary character, I can examine the motives that J.K. Rowling gave him and what I think he should have done based on what I read in the books. If you want to limit religion to that, that's fine, but that's not what religion does.
Actually, when modern theists are discussing the characters in Biblical accounts, that is exactly what we do. We acknowledge that those accounts are probably not historical, but discuss them as moral examples (or counterexamples) and as symbols of theological concepts anyway.
Religion PRAYS to these fantasy characters.
Not to put too fine a point on it, but the plural here is inappropriate. We pray to one "character" only, and as I have said, He is in a different class from either Moses or unicorns.
(As a Jew, I obviously have problems with the idea of praying to Jesus. But that's rather a theological dispute among theists, and probably not germane to our debate.)
Religion thinks these fantasy characters are real.
Biblical literalism again.
Religion imagines that they're special because they were doted upon by one of these fantasy characters.
Note what I said about "personal relationships" with God, above. I keep saying; theism is not identical to fundamentalism. Of all the parts of your argument, that assumption is the weakest.
If you want to do literary criticism of the Bible or Harry Potter, feel free but once you start taking the stories contained within seriously, you've crossed the line to irrationality.
Depends on what you take seriously, doesn't it? Taking the idea of, say, the sun stopping in the sky seriously is of course irrational; taking "Thou Shalt Not Murder" (the correct translation from the Hebrew) seriously is not.
Which proves my point. Love, you admit here, is irrational, and therefore the fact that talk about it is not considered so shows that talk about God shouldn't be, either. But as I say, you've already conceded the point.
You really need to stop lying. I never said that love is irrational, in fact I pointed out that it is EXTREMELY rational in that it has a naturalistic explanation. If you can't be honest, stop responding.
Thanks for the direct insult and ad hom, but you know better.
Are we defining "rational" as "resulting from organized rational thought," as in a belief or decision?
Or are you switching to "rational" meaning "exists and can be understood"?
If you mean the former, then by saying that "love" is an electrochemical reaction in the brain, you are agreeing that it is not rational, as you allege religious belief is not rational. Therefore, if writing about love is not irrational, writing about religion isn't either. That was my original point--but you have conceded that, as I said.
If, on the other hand, you mean the latter--why, then,
religion is rational too, because it also clearly exists and can be naturalistically explained; by cultural and family influences, by the various "needs" and "wants" and "wishful thinking" that you have yourself proposed as its causes, and so on.
Which is it? It can't be "the result of rational thought" with religion and "exists and is explainable" with love. Those are two separate and distinct definitions, and you don't get to have it both ways as it's convenient to your argument.
Either way, you had absolutely no warrant or
rational reason to call me a liar. If you don't understand your own arguments or can't consistently make them, that doesn't make ME dishonest.
---
Well, that was fun; now let's take a brief look at some of my points and arguments that you didn't care to address. I won't speculate on why not; why, that would be mindreading.
cnorman18 wrote:
1. "There are some of us who think there is, or at least may be, more to "reality" than objective, proven facts. We make room in our lives and thoughts for the transcendent, the speculative, the metaphysical; the dream, the hope, even the wish.... There is value in all those things. Are those aspects of reality really there, or do we create them? Who cares? In this life and this world--and I do not claim to know if there are others--we humans must make our own meaning. That perspective may make no sense to you. Too bad. That does not make it wrong, nor me a primitive-minded idiot."
2. "The hundreds of thousands of volumes written on the subject of religion argue pretty strongly that belief in God is just a bit more complex and nuanced than belief in Santa Claus or monsters under the bed. That analogy is not based on reasoned argument, but on pure contempt and a desire to demean and humiliate your opponent. It is a very thinly-veiled insult, and was intended to be... I respect the atheist point of view, and say so often. It's puzzling to me that so many atheists, who claim to believe in tolerance and freedom of thought, can't find a way to respect mine."
3. "If you were stating all this as your own opinion and admitting the possibility of the rationality of my own, we would have no argument here. You aren't doing that. You are stating that your opinion is The Ultimate Definitive Truth and mine is childish, idiotic and indefensible. I don't think you've quite established your credentials on that score, and you haven't come within a light-year of proving, as you said, that the existence of God has "not the slightest possibility of being true."
4.
Cephus wrote:While we cannot completely disprove the existence of God...
"You contradict yourself. "Not the slightest possibility of being true," remember? Everything else you say here is in direct contradiction to the sentence above.
"And: who's "we"? Just wondering. Are you alleging that there are no competent scientists, logicians or philosophers--or any people who make their living with their intellect--who believe in God?"
5.
Cephus wrote:...we cannot completely disprove anything...
"Nonsense. Science has completely disproven all kinds of things. The inheritance of acquired characteristics. That tuberculosis is caused by a particular temperament. That wearing copper bracelets is an effective treatment for arthritis.
Creationism."
6.
Cephus wrote:...science isn't about proof, it's about the best available evidence and that evidence does not support your God.
"How can nonexistent evidence support or not support anything? How can there be any evidence of a transcendent being in the first place? Surely someone has proven that there is no such thing as "transcendence"--no?
"If you can't prove that there is no God, why can't you just accept that there are people who don't believe as you do that are not fools or mental defectives because of that fact?
"Gee, I can; and I'm supposed to be the intolerant, doctrinaire, and closed-minded one. How does that work?"
7. "You are essentially saying, "WE (?) cannot prove that God does not exist, but it's absolutely certain that He does not, therefore," etc., etc. How rational is that?
"...You have here admitted that you absolutely and without question believe something that you cannot prove.
"?"
8.
Cephus wrote: Theists, on the other hand, imagine that morality is handed down by fiat by God, without any understanding for why they should act the way they're told to act.
"...
Some theists seem to believe that "Good" is "Good" only because God says so, but not many, in my experience, and no theologian or Bible scholar in modern times believes this that I have ever heard of. God Himself is constrained by a moral code. That is apparent in the first book of The Bible... The passage in question is in Genesis 18....
"God may or may not have handed humans a code of morals; but either way, it is not arbitrary. God could no more make evil good and good evil than He could have made a world where two and two make five. Morality is built into the nature of reality."
9.
Cephus wrote: It's like someone telling you "my holy book tells me to hop around on one foot and cluck like a chicken." Why? Because the book says so. That's not morality, that's mindless authoritarianism and it's been often perverted by the church and used to control the faithful.
"As I said, that can happen. It's happening in Islam now, when the mass murder of innocents is declared to be a sacred act.
"But it's not integral to religion itself, and is absolutely foreign to a religion like Judaism (and most liberal denominations of Christianity) which encourages and even requires critical thought and taking responsibility for one's own moral judgments."
10.
Cephus wrote:
All of these [theological]works, all religion, starts from the unfounded and irrational assumption that there is this God out there.
"I disproved that with several specific examples. You ignored--and deleted--them."
Cephus wrote:...it just has to be accepted without question.
"False again, and so proven in the parts of my post that you deleted....
"You are rejecting my arguments and examples and insisting on the accuracy of your own phony caricatures over my informed and well-founded objections. How is that logically or rationally different from a fundamentalist who does the same thing in the opposite direction?
"I thought you preferred to talk about
reality. Why, then, can't you address the
reality of religion as it actually is, instead of setting up textbook examples of strawmen and attacking those?"
11.
Cephus wrote:When your assumptions and axioms are unwarranted, it ruins everything it touches.
"If you don't even know the axioms and assumptions, but only cartoon versions of them--as you keep proving out of your own mouth--how can you possibly know they are unwarranted?....
"You have proven over and over that you know
nothing about actual theology as it is actually practiced today, but only the stereotypes and caricatures of it that you cling to,
even when shown that they are demonstrably false."
And, finally, this:
12. "I'm a religious Jew myself, and I am struggling
right now with the following questions: in what sense, exactly, I believe in God; what role, if any, He played in the formation of the Hebrew Bible; whether that book has any authority, considering my recent thoughts on the matter, and if so, in what way; whether my devotion to Jewish tradition and culture either requires or implies a belief in a personal God; and if my personal reasons for believing in God as I have and (so far) still do are still sufficient as these ideas change and evolve, primarily from interactions on this forum.
"Question: If all theists are as invariably and inarguably childish, complacent, unreflective, doctrinaire, and fricken
irrational as you insist we have to be, then where the hell did
I come from?"
Be it noted that I have not called you a liar, claimed to know your true beliefs or motives or otherwise presumed to read your mind, questioned your intelligence, sneered at or ridiculed anything you have to say, or otherwise demeaned or denigrated your ideas or your position. I don't even say that you are wrong; I don't know that.
I do question either your willingness or your ability to deal with modern, liberal religion as it actually exists, and your willingness or ability to tolerate and/or respect views that do not mirror your own; but those are not insults. They are observations, and accurate ones.