That's a good answer actually. Wearing a uniform defined by others is generally a bad idea.My own identity.
-Splicer
Posted 09 August 2008 - 09:14 PM
That's a good answer actually. Wearing a uniform defined by others is generally a bad idea.My own identity.
Posted 12 September 2008 - 07:13 PM
Posted 30 September 2008 - 05:42 PM
I can say I am a "strong atheist" since I have my own theories on why there's no such thing God or so and what render some humans to believe there is.
"Stepping out of this" is like stating "I don't under select ess with it or get into it, I believe in nothing". Which is pretty stupid, since you should in my opinion take a side which in your case atheism and stand for it.
I also say, you can't totally yet prove or , so why in the first place start to believe in such thing?
I can answer that. I can tell why people believe in god, and my reasoning explains why there is not.
But I stand for it, I am an atheist, and I believe in no God, and I will disprove it.
I did understand you, but I think that's a weak attitude to the subject.
-Infernity
Edited by Martinus, 30 September 2008 - 05:46 PM.
Posted 01 October 2008 - 01:59 PM
Posted 06 October 2008 - 12:35 AM
Edited by NarrativiumX, 06 October 2008 - 12:35 AM.
Posted 03 December 2008 - 06:42 AM
Posted 10 December 2008 - 02:10 AM
Posted 10 December 2008 - 03:16 AM
Other than possible bragging rights and perhaps getting dates with nihilistic goth chicks, I can't see why this matters one way or the other.Are you brave enough to live without thinking you'll continue forever or that the universe cares about you?
If it offers a significant advantage then why not embrace it? I suspect any reasonably intelligent person should be able to devise a belief system or adapt an existing one, that simultaneously allows him to tap into this reservoir of comfort, while at the same time benefiting from the latest advances in science and technology.The advantage most believers have over non-believers is that comfort. At critical times, it's no small thing to have the faith that this isn't all there is, that you're part of something larger, that something loves you no matter what, and that you'll continue on forever.
Posted 01 January 2009 - 03:48 AM
Posted 02 January 2009 - 05:52 PM
Edited by imarobot, 02 January 2009 - 06:03 PM.
Posted 11 April 2009 - 03:27 PM
Posted 11 April 2009 - 03:34 PM
Wise minds don't judge other minds.My motto is "Great minds discuss ideas; Average minds discuss events; Small minds discuss people."
(quote from Eleanor Roosevelt)
Posted 01 May 2009 - 03:33 PM
What are you trying to tell me?Wise minds don't judge other minds.My motto is "Great minds discuss ideas; Average minds discuss events; Small minds discuss people."
(quote from Eleanor Roosevelt)
Posted 06 June 2009 - 10:43 PM
Posted 08 June 2009 - 07:43 AM
I voted Buddhist because they have the most rational religion, eg God is everything. This makes sense logically, and ascribes to God all the qualities of the universe (in a physical scientific sense), while putting us all in the position of co-creators. Of course, co-creator is an illusion because we are all one (energy continuum, common source, does not contradict BigBang theory) As a result, all we have to do to experience Godhood is to sit still and clear our minds, duh [wacko] in other words JUST BE.
Posted 23 June 2009 - 03:31 PM
Posted 16 July 2009 - 06:33 PM
Posted 08 August 2009 - 12:26 PM
Posted 30 September 2009 - 08:07 AM
Edited by exapted, 30 September 2009 - 08:09 AM.
Posted 30 September 2009 - 10:16 PM
I don't see a need to die to go to my God, because my sect of Christianity teaches me that in the last days, God will return to us, and there will be a generation, presumably ours, that will not need to die to become perfected. Heaven will literally be made on earth.
Jay Fox
Edited by orlando, 30 September 2009 - 10:17 PM.
Posted 07 October 2009 - 07:56 AM
Posted 07 October 2009 - 07:58 AM
Hi Benedictus,Accidentally chose "atheist", because I didn't really notice "other" as an option. I'd prefer to change that.
I'm not a theist, and I'm very much into science (it's my current occupation, i.e. I make money in the field) but I have experienced (and still at odd times experience) pretty weird and unexplainable things that cannot be considered mere coincidence, things I don't contribute to a higher being but now classify as some kind of bond with a global or cosmic conscience (and the power it might cause or insert in my mind).
Best explained by giving day-to-day life examples, perhaps;
I've often found myself utterly flabbergasted because I switched on a random source of music-play (a radio-station or other type of source with external control of its content) at a random time of the day, and then noticed that while I had a particular song by a particular artist clearly in my mind just minutes before I switched on that radio/tv (or other controlled-by-others music-media-source) it would play that exact song for me. All in a matter of - for example - 15 minutes time, with too uncommon factors in the entire equation to make me think "hey, that's funny, I just wrote down the title of that song, thought about it, and it gets played minutes after that!". Considering that I rarely listen to a music source that does not play what I choose it to play (i.e. isn't controlled by my input), it has totally overruled chance. It just does not compute. It can't be that a particularly rare old pop-song enters my mind, and then when I enter a supermarket somewhere this exact rare old pop-song starts playing in there. I have often tried to put this experience into words, but it still is hard to explain. I can't really qualify it as a gift, but when I was really young I sort of found out that the way I experienced it was not very common (while for me it was), and I might 'suffer' from some type of clairvoyance. Being the skeptic that I am, I wanted to be able to prove to others and myself that what I experience is not just chance or luck or coincidence. How does one do this? One really can't, because the experiences occur in an unpredictable environment and/or situation. I do have some close friends who have often noticed a strange abnormal capacity of predict-ability in what I would whistle or hum, minutes or even seconds before it would play on the car stereo and similar odd things like that. They would then look at me puzzled, suspecting me to work at the particular radiostation (because I have been employed at some in my life), but I could prove I did not. It's mostly connected to music, has been all my life. So what type of belief would that imply? What causes that? Telepathy? More direct access to a global or cosmic conscienceness?
Posted 27 October 2009 - 06:49 AM
Edited by Esoparagon, 27 October 2009 - 06:49 AM.
Posted 01 November 2009 - 07:52 PM
Posted 02 November 2009 - 03:40 PM
Edited by Esoparagon, 02 November 2009 - 03:46 PM.
Posted 06 November 2009 - 05:18 PM
Posted 20 December 2009 - 10:51 PM
God is infinite love. The other things are other things. They got nothing to do with God!! In another topic I demonstrate the (mathematicaly) possibility of God´s existence, so, nobody can be so sure about the non-existence of God!When asked the question, "Do you belive in God?", one cannot answer "I don't know". If you do not explicitly express a belief in God, then you are an atheist. There is no middle ground on a yes or no question. You can be a strong or weak atheist, or even an agnostic atheist. Agnosticism pertains to believing that the concept of God can be proven or not. There are agnostic theists and agnostic atheists.
from "http://www.physicsfo...ad.php?t=54501"
This is how I feel but couldn't be bothered to eloquently express it when someone else had already done so. Agnostic is not an answer. Weak atheist agnostic or strong atheist agnostic are. Most agnostics are really weak atheists who are strictly agnostic. I am strictly agnostic. I'm strictly agnostic on anything that is pure speculative nonsense
Unicorns, devils, flying spaghetti monsters, monsters, dragons, fairies, big foot, spider man, jedi mind powers, magical powers, the galactic tea pot that flies around our sun, psychic abilities, yetis, god, zeus, thor, gods of any kind, ghosts, spirits, heaven, hell, angels, rabbits with 10 heads, dogs with spider legs and no eyes but instead they have xray vision, xenu, Michael Jackson.
All these things full into that category.
Posted 01 January 2010 - 03:47 PM
Posted 05 January 2010 - 01:42 AM
Posted 05 January 2010 - 07:07 PM
1. I'm an "atheist" about god in same way that I'm an "atheist" about martians. It would be misleading to say that I'm "agnostic" about martians, even though that would be technically correct. But if someone broadens the common definition of martians to include microbes, then I'm an "agnositic" about that. (In the same way that some definitions of god are so ill-defined as to force one to be an agnostic about such speculation.)
2. I would find praying to / worshipping / subjecting myself to an imagined powerful male patriarch to be repulsive and demeaning. The fact that people so readily do this says a lot about what kind of chimps we are, but little about whether such a god exists.
3. Slapping a "god" at the start of an otherwise physical line of causation adds nothing to one's knowledge of the universe. It is equivlalent to creating an imaginary friend, which will quickly lose its effect if one is forced to answer too many questions about such a friend.
4. The fact that so many people bend over backwards to deny being an "atheist" (vs. "agnositic", "other", etc.), even though they're everyday actions are devoid of any reference to god (or martians), says something about how hard it is for humans to be objective (scientific), how easily influenced we all are by the opinions of others, and what lengths we'll all go to to "fit in". (It would be like arguing that I'm Catholic because I do think that anything's possible, and one possibility is some abstract form of god, and lot's of Catholics don't really believe in much more than that, so I could be Catholic too, especially when I'm with a lot of other Catholics who would like to think that I'm a Catholic.)
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