- Capitalism and Alternatives -

Shoot, all I got's a plastic Jesus on my dashboard.

Posted by: Frenchy on March 02, 19100 at 10:31:23:

In Reply to: Jesus built my hotrod. posted by Farinata on March 01, 19100 at 17:18:55:


: : Wait a minute. The Bible is a basis for belief.

: It is a basis for belief only if you assume that it is a basis for belief - which is circular reasoning.

The only way that can be is if you can prove that God doesn't exist. Until then the Bible has as much validity as the writings of Josepheus, Tacitus, Livy, etc. (unless you believe that they never existed either).
By the way, do you think that Jesus and the Apostles were real people? Or were they all part of a myth?

: You might as well say that the Koran is a sound basis for belief because it says that there is no God but Allah.

Ahh, but the Koran hasn't been subjected to nearly the same degree of scutiny as the Bible has. And the Koran presents us with no miracles other than the fact that the Koran was miraculously written by Mohammed.
By the way, what's your theory on the resurrection? How was that accomplished? That is the neatest trick...any ideas?


: You cannot say that the Bible is inherently any sounder as a basis for belief than the Koran, the Talmud or The Lord of the Rings; they are self-referential, and justify their existence by their existence.


Well, not true. Historians agree that many of the incidents mentioned in the Bible did in fact happen. And the evidence provided via archeology was sometimes produced after scholars had declared that it was impossible.

: : : As such, his belief is more reasonable than yours; it can never be proven to be correct or incorrect; but it explains the perceived phenomena better.

: : The seven deadly sins explain a lot too.

: Non sequitur, Frenchy; you'll have to expand on that comment.

The seven deadly sins explain a lot of what we would describe as sinful behavior. Pride, Greed, etc. Human nature if you like.

: : : And if you disagree, perhaps you'd like to go and eat a pork chop in the centre of Mecca...?

: : : After all, if you believe that your morality is the only correct one, you can't really suffer any blame for what happens to you...

: : sure you can, and in this case would, because others would be wrong to harm a man who ate pork.

: They'd be perfectly within the decrees of their faith to punish an unbeliever who ate 'unclean' animals in the Holy City.

: : Would you defend their actions?

: No, since I'm not a Moslem. However, anyone who showed such blatant disregard for the religious feelings of other religions would be asking for whatever ill fate came to them. It's called 'self-inflicted injury' in my book.

But wait a second. If you maintain that other standards have as much validity as say mine, in other words, if you don't have an opinion as to which standard is really right, or true, why would you not support their decision to kill me? Your differentiating between two belief systems clearly choosing one over the other. What is that based on?

: : Your position is that since there is no absolutes, not only would they be within their rights to do so, but that slavery is acceptable, ethnic genocide is acceptable, and come to think of it, that eliminating entire economic classes of people is OK too.

: No, Frenchy; you are missing the point of tolerance; it cuts both ways.

Oh, a nifty qualification.
So, let me get this straight. All standards are equally valid but only if they include tolerance. That means that not all standards are equal becuase those standards that do not include tolerance are not equal to yours. Hmmmmmm,....

: There are good causes for not being able to claim that yours is the One True God; to do so, you have to claim that your invisible, infinite and unproveable being exists and Islam's doesn't. Neither party can ever prove that argument one way or the other.

: : Hmmmmmmmm, sound familiar?

: Yup. Virtually every major world religion has indulged in the above behaviour on a repeated basis (with the possible exception of Buddhism and Taoism).

: (Perhaps you've never been to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. There is a staircase going down to the Chapel of St John, that is covered in carved crosses - carved in 1099 by the victorious Crusaders with their swords; who had just sacked Jerusalem and put many of its inhabitants into slavery and killed the rest. I've been there; I have pictures of the crosses, carved by all those devout Christian men...)

(Ahh, yes, the Crusades. Any idea what the cause of the Crusades were? Did you learn about that while on your trip? Did you learn that the Muslims had over run Jerusalem and much of the Middle East? Would the proper response on the part of the Church and Kings of the tenth century to have let the Muslims continue their invasion? What would you have done?)

: : : : Morality is only a social construct if there is no higher ideal imposed upon us by a higher source.

: : : And of course, yours is the only correct morality, Stuart...

: : Correct to the best of our knowledge.

: The best of *your* knowledge (which conveniently overlooks sundry self-contradictions and glaring logical errors).

No, not *my* knowledge, I said *our*, as in the knowledge that man has gained throughout the ages.

: : : : If man's perception of right and wrong is continually evolving, how can you or anyone else have any intellectual integrity when using the language of moral absolutes?

: : : Oh-ho, it's the old 'intellectual integrity' accusation; something that Stuart rolls out when he doesn't understand or agree with his opponent's point of view.

: : But you don't answer. Is it because there is an internal contradiction in claiming to have answers while denying there are absolutes?

: Nope: it's because Stuart had just lost an argument with me in the Anything Else room - during which he accused me of 'lack of intellectual integrity'.

: I never claimed to have ultimate answers; never have done, never will do. What I did was point out the inherent contradictions and errors in Stuart's argument.


Did Stuart claim to have the ultimate answer? Besides, if you admit that you don't have the answers, how in the world can you be so sure that others don't? How do you know these things if you say you don't know?


: By analogy, I don't know if there is a basic number system inherent to the Universe(e.g. ei.pi+1 or similar); that doesn't stop me from correcting someone who insists that 1 + 1 = 3...

The existence of God can be proved by analogy too; the clockmaker.

: : : (Given that Stuart is to philosophy and theology what Dan Quayle was to politics and diplomacy, this ain't exactly rare...)

: : Tut tut, ad hominems, from one who claims there are no absolutes, ie; 'your opinion is no better or no worse than mine'.

: However, this is a debate; a logical (supposedly) and rational (also supposedly) meeting of opposing viewpoints; although I can't fault someone for believing there is or isn't a God, I can fault them on unsound premises.

: : : : To attempt to emotionally persuade folks with moral absolutes is foolishness if you are merely a man with an opinion.

: : : Except for you, of course; you have a hotline to The Almighty, don't you...?

: : Ooops! another ad hominem. C'mon, the best you can do, if you really believe in what you say you do, is to say, 'oh, that's a nice opinion'.

: Is the person in question willing to do the same to me?

No, of course not. You set your own standards and I set my own. If your standard is that all truth is relative fine, but you've put yourself in the position of having to withhold any judgements on my beliefs. I happen to believe that there are knowable absolutes.


: No. Look at the whole thread in the Anything Else room.

: I behaved in a very tolerant and reasonable fashion towards Stuart, who responded with lines like;

: "Look where we get when a scientists starts to rationalize his poor behavior."

: Give me a good reason I should be polite to Stuart when he tries exactly the same tactic with Barry that he tried with me...it is a waste of time being polite to people who respond with personal abuse and invective, and I've run out of patience with Stuart.

: Tolerance is a virtue; but it is wasted on the intolerant; and Stuart has displayed blatant intolerance on enough occasions.

: Which is why I called him 'a poor debater and a worse Christian.'

So not all opinions are equally valid, or relevant. Personally I've always found Stuart to be a cut above. He effectively defends his positions and does so in a gentlemanly manner.
Not like myself at all.

: : All opinions are based only on current and impermanant things after all.

: True. However, physical phenomena are generally very reliable; what goes up has always previously come down; whereas no two prophets have ever agreed on what God actually is.

Hold on, it seems as if Quantum Mechanics demands that there exists a parallel universe of some sort, that pairs of electrons inexplicalbly change spins when seperated from each other, etc.
Just because we can't, as humans, say what God is doesn't lead to the conclusion that he isn't. Besides, wouldn't you expect a God to be something beyond our understanding?

: (If nothing else, this should render the holders of religious beliefs among the most tolerant of people; unfortunately, it doesn't follow; people who hold religious opinions think that they have a special connection with the permanent and 'real'.)

: : : To attempt to persuade folks with moral absolutes is a waste of time, since their faculties are so damaged by their obsession that they are unable to discard any obsolete article of faith.

: : So tell me Far, is that an absolute opinion? LOL!

: No, it's my opinion, as I implied. My opinion is not absolute and eternal; no-one's is...

: Farinata.


For what it's worth; A long time ago I rejected religion. Since then I've taken the time to learn some things about it. The more I learn about it, the more questions that form in my mind. It's easier to accept the Biblical accounts of Jesus' life than to try to figure out how the miracles were faked, how the resurrection was pulled off, why the Apostles were willing to die for something they knew (if the resurrection was a fake) to be a lie, etc.
I dunno, what do you think? Care to explain to me how Jesus managed to stage so many miracles?

--
Mcspotlight: Guys, this really belongs in the Anything Else room.


Follow Ups:

The Debating Room Post a Followup