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Atheism/Existence of God Debates (Please Read OP)

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  • Registered Users Posts: 4,255 ✭✭✭tommy2bad


    Zorbas ;
    Evolution armed humans with a sense of morality which overrides our primal instincts to induce right from wrong.
    Oh if only this were true.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 194 ✭✭Zorbas


    tommy2bad wrote: »
    Oh if only this were true.

    You have something there - perhaps the prefrontal cortex has'nt always been fully developed. Saw a Horizon programme lately where some US scientists reckoned they had established a genetic pre-dispostion to psychopathy from scan of the prefrontals. Not sure we want to know!!


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,255 ✭✭✭tommy2bad


    Zorbas wrote: »
    You have something there - perhaps the prefrontal cortex has'nt always been fully developed. Saw a Horizon programme lately where some US scientists reckoned they had established a genetic pre-dispostion to psychopathy from scan of the prefrontals. Not sure we want to know!!

    Well this is the thing, in a tight spot, say a war a phyco might be a good ally.
    Most successful people have been found to have psychopathic tendencies.
    Our natural inherited tendencies are just the material our personalities are crafted from. Religion, culture and social or family pressure contribute to the complete person. We are more than stuff with a electro chemical motor.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 194 ✭✭Zorbas


    tommy2bad wrote: »
    Well this is the thing, in a tight spot, say a war a phyco might be a good ally.
    Most successful people have been found to have psychopathic tendencies.
    Our natural inherited tendencies are just the material our personalities are crafted from. Religion, culture and social or family pressure contribute to the complete person. We are more than stuff with a electro chemical motor.

    Problem is that those "with the battery operated belief system in God" have become so judgemental that anyone with an alternative view is seen as a threat to be extinguished.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,686 ✭✭✭✭PDN


    Zorbas wrote: »
    Problem is that those "with the battery operated belief system in God" have become so judgemental that anyone with an alternative view is seen as a threat to be extinguished.


    Moderator Warning
    I would suggest that you read the Forum Charter before making any more such sweeping and inaccurate generalisations. If applied to all firm believers in God then what you have written is a downright falsehood and breaks the Charter's ruling on unreasonable bigotry.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 194 ✭✭Zorbas


    PDN wrote: »
    Moderator Warning
    I would suggest that you read the Forum Charter before making any more such sweeping and inaccurate generalisations. If applied to all firm believers in God then what you have written is a downright falsehood and breaks the Charter's ruling on unreasonable bigotry.
    electro chemical motor is a sort of battery dont you think? Maybe the link to the previous comment has escaped you. never mind no doubt another train wreck in process.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,255 ✭✭✭tommy2bad


    Zorbas wrote: »
    Problem is that those "with the battery operated belief system in God" have become so judgemental that anyone with an alternative view is seen as a threat to be extinguished.

    I don't think it that extreme but the sense of being under attack has brought out the shriller side of believers. Its a defensiveness thats unwarranted tbh. Both sides have to accommodate each other and in time will. We are just in the middle of a change from an almost theocracy to an almost secularist state.
    I don't think Ireland will ever be fully secular, it's not in our culture. We will end up with an Irish solution.
    The media bloat the differences between the sides as it makes good copy and they have a template from America that doesn't apply here but they are lazy and use it anyway. Don't believe everything you think ;)


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 7,142 ✭✭✭ISAW


    Zorbas wrote: »
    Agree ;
    Also cant see what difference it would make if a country declared itself either aethiest, Christian or Muslim.

    apart from the fact that all countries declaring themselves atheist were complete failures?
    I wonder how modern day Christians explain away the Crusades, the Spanish Inquisition, Slavery and Witch hunts that were for many years a test of Christianity.

    If you bothered to search this forum on any of them you wouldnt have to wonder

    Ill deal with them in reverse

    Slavery Monarchy communist or Capitalism are not anything the church oppose. any problems with them arise not out of them per se but out of related issues such as monarchs claiming to represent god or greed getting involved in rampant capitalism otr atheism destroying the altruistic values in communism.

    slavery was supported by a single Borgia Pope and his predecessors and antecedents opposed it!

    witch hunts were q Us Protestant and Eastern European phenomenon. Irelqand for example under Protestant control at the time but mostly catholic had something like two witches executed in two centuries.

    the Spanish Inquisition executes maybe 20,000 people over 450 years! the atheistic regimez in france killed more Catholics in one region -the Vendee- in a single year!
    Not nice i agree but it works out at about seven a year. and I think half were jews so it comes across as anti Jew and not necessarily an element of christianity.

    Crusades - maybe a million dead over two centuries. Most of the nasty ones were franks. In fact the Muslims allowed the Orthodox Christians in Jerusalem but kicked uot the Frankish element.

    Is there a comparable history of conviction led atrocity with the followers of Mohammed I wonder?

    i don,t. Is that a rhetorical question? Are you really claiming the Christians were the only people who killed others during the Crusades?


    To know right from wrong for both Muslims and Christian is not a matter of judgement but of obedience whereas morality for most social mammals comes from having a prefrontal cortex which is what gives us our morality.

    that is an unsupported opinion that morality is biologically determined.
    We know this because Christians and Muslims work that way too. Few think it’s OK to stone children or people who work on the Sabbath or rape young girls providing you marry them afterwards even though the bible says it is.

    You really are not pâying attention. This has been dealt with before. WHERE does the bible say it is okay to rape children? and you still have only opinion that biomogy predetermines morality.
    Evolution armed humans with a sense of morality which overrides our primal instincts to induce right from wrong. A belief system may depend on a book but morality as affecting life and the way we organise ourselves does not.

    Reifying "evolution" does NOT provide any support for the contention that biology recapitulates the development of morality.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 7,142 ✭✭✭ISAW


    Zorbas wrote: »
    Problem is that those "with the battery operated belief system in God" have become so judgemental that anyone with an alternative view is seen as a threat to be extinguished.
    No. your problem is you cant prove morality is predetermined by biology or Chemistry. Your opinion that belief can be logically proved based on you belief about the "laws of physics" which when subject to the same analysis you apply to religious belief may not be not so sound as you may think.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 194 ✭✭Zorbas


    Appears to me that the reaction by those who would defend the cruelty inflicted by the religious inspired is to claim that others did more killing.
    Would it not be inspiring if instead there was a more humble and contrite explanation offered. There is no problem with admitting that religion has not always worked for the better and that it has changed and adapted over the years- or is it that any admission of evil would weaken the whole trip?
    Forgive me if I have not searched the whole forum for the font of knowledge on this and other obscure facts that are barely hidden!!


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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 7,142 ✭✭✭ISAW


    Zorbas wrote: »
    Appears to me that the reaction by those who would defend the cruelty inflicted by the religious

    It appears to me you are living in cloud cuckoo land if you think I defended any atrocities committed in the name of Christianity.
    inspired is to claim that others did more killing.

    You seem to make habit of contradicting yourself!

    It was YOU who stated "Also cant see what difference it would make if a country declared itself either aethiest, Christian or Muslim.

    and if a difference of more killing is pointed out you then accept the difference but somehow say this difference is pointless thereby ignoring your original questioning of it making no difference at all!
    Forgive me if I have not searched the whole forum for the font of knowledge on this and other obscure facts that are barely hidden!!
    You havent searched about the Spanish inquisition and other items which you could have found in less than a minute. Instead you came in and blurted out in ignorance. It isnt for me to forgive that.

    Try actually doing some research before displaying your ignorance.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 194 ✭✭Zorbas


    ISAW wrote: »
    It appears to me you are living in cloud cuckoo land


    You seem to make habit of contradicting yourself!


    you came in and blurted out in ignorance. It isnt for me to forgive that.

    Try actually doing some research before displaying your ignorance.

    Now do you think that kind of invective deserves a response?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 7,142 ✭✭✭ISAW


    Zorbas wrote: »
    Now do you think that kind of invective deserves a response?

    Yup! You began with no difference. You were shown there was a difference. you then said the difference does not matter when you began by stating the difference isnt there. a clear contradiction!

    It was you who stated you had not " searched the whole forum for the font of knowledge on this and other obscure facts that are barely hidden!!"


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,457 ✭✭✭Morbert


    From the "Richard Dawkins Crushed" thread:

    Wow, the title of that thread is horribly misleading. The survey raises some very interesting issues.

    http://richarddawkins.net/articles/644941-rdfrs-uk-ipsos-mori-poll-1-how-religious-are-uk-christians
    Only about a third of what we shall call 'Census-Christians' cited religious beliefs as the reason they had ticked the Christian box in the 2011 Census

    • 37% of them have never or almost never prayed outside a church service

    • Asked where they seek most guidance in questions of right and wrong, only 10% of Census-Christians said it was from religious teachings or beliefs

    • Just a third (32%) believe Jesus was physically resurrected; half (49%) do not think of him as the Son of God

    • And when given 4 books of the Bible to select from and asked which was the first book of the New Testament, only 35% could identify Matthew as the correct answer.

    The above is just a small sample of fascinating results, demonstrating that Christianity is only notional among many Christians. Of all the questions asked, the most uninteresting and irrelevant one is the NT author question. Far more interesting questions included ones about the resurrection and divinity of Jesus, the morality of sex outside of marriage, and the reasons given for calling themselves Christian. But the pastor "crushed" Dawkins by arguing that one question in the survey was not sufficient on its own to draw any interesting conclusions. Of course it wasn't.

    Is there a youtube video, or even transcript, of the full interview? I would love to hear it.
    ISAW wrote:
    Morberts claim in relation to Norway was if people are not really church oif England / church of Norway and they only just put that down on the census form without believing it then somehow it means 70% of Norway is atheist!
    http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showp...postcount=2119
    look at the cartoon.

    Do you believe a person can be a member of the church of England/Norway if they don't believe in God? Do you believe a person can be an atheist if they believe in the supernatural?

    And to avoid any confusion, I don't think the RDFRS survey shows that the UK is atheist. To do that, they would have to ask questions directly pertaining to atheism. Questions like "Do you believe there is a God?".
    And I would remind you that core belief in Darwinian "evolution" have been modified by catastrophic interpretations e.g the influence of events of Biblical proportions -pun intended on classical darwinism.

    Geology is still uniformitarian. The "catastrophism" that modified it is only the punctuated equilibrium variety, and no the Biblical creationist variety.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,255 ✭✭✭tommy2bad


    Is there a youtube video, or even transcript, of the full interview? I would love to hear it.
    Best I can do morbert.
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/today/hi/today/newsid_9696000/9696135.stm


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 7,142 ✭✭✭ISAW


    Morbert wrote: »

    Do you believe a person can be a member of the church of England/Norway if they don't believe in God? Do you believe a person can be an atheist if they believe in the supernatural?

    Dont waste our time! 30% saying they are church or England or Norway does not mean 70% is atheist and you know it!

    And to avoid any confusion, I don't think the RDFRS survey shows that the UK is atheist. To do that, they would have to ask questions directly pertaining to atheism. Questions like "Do you believe there is a God?".

    33% of he sample stated "no religion" about twice what i would expect. These NNES are not atheist. There is other evidence in tother surveys o back that up. Same for Norway.
    Geology is still uniformitarian. The "catastrophism" that modified it is only the punctuated equilibrium variety, and no the Biblical creationist variety.

    Yes i agree catastrophes of biblical proportions are an established causal factor in the narrative of evolution and speciation. This is not Biblical fundamentalism.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,457 ✭✭✭Morbert


    ISAW wrote: »
    Dont waste our time! 30% saying they are church or England or Norway does not mean 70% is atheist and you know it!

    70% said they didn't believe "a God existed", according to the Eurobarometer statistics. Do you believe any of these can be a Christian? Do you believe there is more criteria than not believing in God to be an atheist?
    33% of he sample stated "no religion" about twice what i would expect. These NNES are not atheist. There is other evidence in tother surveys o back that up. Same for Norway.

    I cannot comment on this, since I do not know your personal definition of "atheism".


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 7,142 ✭✭✭ISAW


    Morbert wrote: »
    70% said they didn't believe "a God existed", according to the Eurobarometer statistics. Do you believe any of these can be a Christian? Do you believe there is more criteria than not believing in God to be an atheist?

    I believe you claimed Norway was 70% atheist! You have avoided admitting that you clai,ed it but you clearly did. You posted a cartoon with the claim in it and when pressed on the issue you supported the claim.

    do you now admit Norway is not 70% atheist as you claimed?
    Or do you just deny claiming it was 70% atheist?


    [/quote]
    I cannot comment on this, since I do not know your personal definition of "atheism".[/QUOTE]

    That is odd since i have several times in this thread quoted the NONES survey which defines atheist

    http://commons.trincoll.edu/aris/
    http://commons.trincoll.edu/aris/publications/american-nones-the-profile-of-the-no-religion-population/

    see figure 1.13 page 11

    I told you that in a direct reply five days ago:
    http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=77096959&postcount=2280

    Others made the same claim for denmark in this thread eight mnths ago and i supplied the same definition
    http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=72527165&postcount=559

    Almost two years ago I was using the same definition of atheist
    http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=66269572&postcount=843

    Indeed here
    http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=67006453&postcount=76
    Is a thread wher i refer to See figure 1.13 on page 11.

    1.5 per cent of US are atheist= "There is no such thing as God"

    And you replied to my preceding message i;e; 75 four messages later
    apparently either
    1. you didnt read my references the
    or
    2. you forgot i had referred to the survey which defines atheist.

    In any case it still does not make Norway 70% atheist as you claimed.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 194 ✭✭Zorbas


    Looks like ISAW does not think that Norway was 70% athiest. Must be great to have something to hold onto like that! Still wonder if there is any proof one way or t'other in which case I'm not convinced as I might otherwise be. Censuses are quite unreliable as who can say what people enter on those inquisitive forms is a protest or a truth?


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,463 ✭✭✭marienbad


    ISAW wrote: »
    I believe you claimed Norway was 70% atheist! You have avoided admitting that you clai,ed it but you clearly did. You posted a cartoon with the claim in it and when pressed on the issue you supported the claim.

    do you now admit Norway is not 70% atheist as you claimed?
    Or do you just deny claiming it was 70% atheist?

    I cannot comment on this, since I do not know your personal definition of "atheism".[/QUOTE]

    That is odd since i have several times in this thread quoted the NONES survey which defines atheist

    http://commons.trincoll.edu/aris/
    http://commons.trincoll.edu/aris/publications/american-nones-the-profile-of-the-no-religion-population/

    see figure 1.13 page 11

    I told you that in a direct reply five days ago:
    http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=77096959&postcount=2280

    Others made the same claim for denmark in this thread eight mnths ago and i supplied the same definition
    http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=72527165&postcount=559

    Almost two years ago I was using the same definition of atheist
    http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=66269572&postcount=843

    Indeed here
    http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=67006453&postcount=76


    And you replied to my preceding message i;e; 75 four messages later
    apparently either
    1. you didnt read my references the
    or
    2. you forgot i had referred to the survey which defines atheist.

    In any case it still does not make Norway 70% atheist as you claimed.[/QUOTE]

    Dos'nt make it Christian either ISAW as you claim


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  • Registered Users Posts: 4,255 ✭✭✭tommy2bad


    marienbad, Morbert is saying that if people self describe as not believing in God then they are atheist.
    ISAW says "dosn't matter what they call themselves, the census says they are not atheists."
    I'v met people like this before, a civil servant once told me it didn't matter if a school was there or not as long as it was on his map, it was the school we should send our children too.
    With some people you cant win.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,457 ✭✭✭Morbert


    ISAW wrote: »
    I believe you claimed Norway was 70% atheist! You have avoided admitting that you clai,ed it but you clearly did. You posted a cartoon with the claim in it and when pressed on the issue you supported the claim.

    do you now admit Norway is not 70% atheist as you claimed?
    Or do you just deny claiming it was 70% atheist?

    If "I do not believe in a God or gods" is the definition of an atheist, then yes, I believe Norway is 70% atheist, according to the Euro-barometer statistics (not the cartoon).
    That is odd since i have several times in this thread quoted the NONES survey which defines atheist

    http://commons.trincoll.edu/aris/
    http://commons.trincoll.edu/aris/publications/american-nones-the-profile-of-the-no-religion-population/

    see figure 1.13 page 11

    I told you that in a direct reply five days ago:
    http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=77096959&postcount=2280

    Others made the same claim for denmark in this thread eight mnths ago and i supplied the same definition
    http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=72527165&postcount=559

    Almost two years ago I was using the same definition of atheist
    http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=66269572&postcount=843

    Indeed here
    http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=67006453&postcount=76


    And you replied to my preceding message i;e; 75 four messages later
    apparently either
    1. you didnt read my references the
    or
    2. you forgot i had referred to the survey which defines atheist.

    In any case it still does not make Norway 70% atheist as you claimed.

    You have tendered conflicting definitions. That is odd indeed.

    Do you define atheism as the lack of belief in a God or gods, or do you define atheism as materialism?


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,463 ✭✭✭marienbad


    ISAW, the oxford dictionary gives us the following definition for totalitarian

    ''relating to a system of government that is centralized and dictatorial and requires complete subservience to the state''

    and that subservience applies to churches, political parties, trade unions, newspapers, sports organisations , everything and anything that could engender dissent.

    One could use your arguments just as easily to make a separate case for the supression of political parties or unions etc . Particularly with political parties as such parties are usually eliminated first and in their entirety whereas religion is allowed to continue but under terrible difficulties.

    The key issue is the supression of dissent is it not ?

    Why privilege one organisation over another ? In all those ''atheistic regimes'' ''there is no God regimes'' you are so fond of listing can you name one that tolerated political parties as we know them ? trade unions ? Newspapers ?


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,080 ✭✭✭lmaopml


    What has Norway got to do with anything? Apart from the Vikings....sure they're all living here now, they decided to stay... :pac:

    Maybe it has something to do with the climate up there, they keep swapping and changing so much. They started off as Pagans, where Christianised 1000 years AD, Reformed during the reformation, and now the Spiritual movement seems to have taken hold too, and it doesn't appear Buddhist in nature either, too much Oprah

    - Interestingly Spain is 70% religious, now there's a good climate :)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,479 ✭✭✭✭philologos


    tumblr_lzp484CfnY1r4355oo1_500.jpg
    (robbed from koths post on the funny side thread)
    oldrnwisr wrote: »
    Really?


    Omniscience

    God described as omniscient:

    "I make known the end from the beginning, from ancient times, what is still to come."
    Isaiah 46:10

    "Before a word is on my tongue, you Lord, know it completely." Psalm 139:4

    "Your eyes saw my unformed body; all the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to be." Psalm 139:16

    "Great is our Lord and mighty in power; his understanding has no limit." Psalm 147:5

    “And you, my son Solomon, acknowledge the God of your father, and serve him with wholehearted devotion and with a willing mind, for the LORD searches every heart and understands every desire and every thought." 1 Chronicles 28:9


    Contradicted by:

    "Then the LORD said, “The outcry against Sodom and Gomorrah is so great and their sin so grievous that I will go down and see if what they have done is as bad as the outcry that has reached me. If not, I will know.”" Genesis 18:20-21

    “Do not lay a hand on the boy,” he said. “Do not do anything to him. Now I know that you fear God, because you have not withheld from me your son, your only son.” Genesis 22:12

    "Then the LORD said to Cain, “Where is your brother Abel?” Genesis 4:9

    "The blood will be a sign for you on the houses where you are, and when I see the blood, I will pass over you. No destructive plague will touch you when I strike Egypt." Exodus 12:13


    That's only one, admittedly, but it's a big one. In the meantime please feel free to refute these:

    SAB contradictions

    Bible Inconsistencies: Bible Contradictions?

    I've brought these over from the A&A forum as I feel they are better discussed here.

    I find going through a list of alleged contradictions that someone has found merely online disproportionate in effort. I could easily google Christian sites for these, what I will do, is go through a few of the ones that were quoted. So, no I'm not going to go through an entire link of alleged contradictions because you can simply google to find Christian explanations for these, but I will take a look at some of the ones that you have listed nonetheless.

    Mark chapter 3 - On blasphemy against the Holy Spirit. Interestingly, I read this a few months ago with my small group at church. Here's a little of what I thought at the time:
    “Truly, I say to you, all sins will be forgiven the children of man, and whatever blasphemies they utter, but whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit never has forgiveness, but is guilty of an eternal sin”—for they were saying, “He has an unclean spirit.”
    Blasphemes in this passage is written in the present tense rather than in the past tense. The passage as such isn’t saying whoever has ever blasphemed the Holy Spirit at any one point in their lives will be forgiven, but rather for as long as someone blasphemes they will not be able to come to forgiveness through Jesus Christ.


    ...


    The broader question seems to be how can you be forgiven if you don’t want to be forgiven? The context of either side of this passage also gives us a little more perspective as to why this should be the case. In the previous section we have both Jesus’ family claim that He is mad (Mark 3:21), and the Pharisees claiming that Jesus was casting out demons in the name of Satan rather than in the name of God and Jesus’ response to that objection, essentially how could one plunder Satan’s house with his blessing, the simple paradox of Satan casting out Satan (Mark 3:21-27). In the following section of this passage we have Jesus at his house with His disciples and with His family, where He says “For whoever does the will of God, he is my mother, my brother, and my sister and my mother” (Mark 3:35). This is the radical conclusion that as important as family was in Jewish society that faith is more important in terms of the Kingdom of God that Jesus had come to proclaim (Mark 1:14-15).
    The context in Mark's Gospel doesn't back up the conclusion that whoever has blasphemed against the Holy Spirit will be condemned. Rather it says that whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven, simply put because if you blaspheme in the present against the Holy Spirit, insofar as you do that you can't be forgiven because you've rejected the means for forgiveness.


    Exodus 12 - The idea that God uses human language to explain Himself is not remarkable. God is speaking to human kind in human terms. This passage doesn't even say that God isn't omniscient, but rather it backs up that He is intimately present with us as His people through Christ, or in this case as a result of being a part of the nation of Israel.

    Genesis 4 - Again, the mere fact that God asks Cain where his brother is is irrelevant. The point isn't to demonstrate His lack of knowledge, but rather it is to make abundant to Cain what He has done. The idea that this passage must mean that God isn't omniscient is absurd.

    Genesis 22 & Genesis 18: These passages can be easily explained also. Again, it's pretty easy to see that this can be reconciled with God's omnipotence. God engages with people on human terms. Before Abraham ever considered God's command, God knew that Abraham would obey Him. That's why Genesis makes clear that Abraham would be a father of many nations in Genesis 15 and 17 when He tells him of His covenant with His people. It's funny that you overlook God's omniscience in Genesis 15 and 17, and the very fact that His word comes true in Genesis 22. If God had said that Abraham would be a father of many nations and this promise didn't come true, I would certainly disagree with you. Until that point this is a really weak objection to God's word. God knew from the beginning that His promise would come true, and He knew that it would be fulfilled in Jesus Christ. God told us that Abraham would be a father of many nations. That came true by adoption by Jesus' death and resurrection (see Galatians).

    Genesis 18 is a display of God's omnipotence. Has it ever crossed your mind that God has actually noted the outcry of Sodom and Gomorrah. Have you noticed that God in this passage is not bound by time and space. In much the same way, if one considers that God has a knowledge of past present and future, or even that God created time, this is also an extremely weak contradiction. God knew that He was going to punish Sodom and Gomorrah from the beginning of time.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 7,142 ✭✭✭ISAW


    Zorbas wrote: »
    Looks like ISAW does not think that Norway was 70% athiest. Must be great to have something to hold onto like that!

    what i think has nothing to do with it! Others claiming Norway is 70% atheist is what
    others claimed:
    2119 Which says "according to their latest census over 70% of Norway is atheist"
    That just isn't true!
    Still wonder if there is any proof one way or t'other in which case I'm not convinced as I might otherwise be. Censuses are quite unreliable as who can say what people enter on those inquisitive forms is a protest or a truth?

    1. it isnt a case of balance it is a case of the person making the claim supporting that claim!

    2. the 28% saying they believe in a god does not mean 68% or 70% do not believe in a God

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005 17% answered that "they do not believe there is any sort of spirit, God, or life force".

    Approximately 9-10% are probably not members of any religious or philosophical communities, while 8.6 % of the population are members of other religious or philosophical communities outside the Church of Norway.
    http://www.ssb.no/english/subjects/07/02/10/trosamf_en/

    Norways own statistics Religious and life stance communities, 1 January 2011

    In 2005, a survey conducted by Gallup International in sixty-five countries indicated that Norway was the least religious country in Western Europe, with 29% counting themselves as believing in a church or deity, 26% as being atheists, and 45% not being entirely certain.

    That's about a quarter atheist not a majority and not 70% and it is the most atheist country in Europe.
    1.7% are Humanist 13% are nones.

    tommy2bad wrote: »
    marienbad, Morbert is saying that if people self describe as not believing in God then they are atheist.

    NO he is NOT!
    He is saying if 32% say they believe in a God then the rest are all atheist!
    http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=76817865&postcount=2123
    Only 30% believe in God. The rest are atheist.

    ISAW says "dosn't matter what they call themselves, the census says they are not atheists."
    I'v met people like this before, a civil servant once told me it didn't matter if a school was there or not as long as it was on his map, it was the school we should send our children too.
    With some people you cant win.
    Nonsense!
    I didnt bring up the claim or supply the definition of "everyone not in the group saying they believe in God is atheist"

    Morbert wrote: »
    If "I do not believe in a God or gods" is the definition of an atheist, then yes, I believe Norway is 70% atheist, according to the Euro-barometer statistics (not the cartoon).

    the eurobarometer statistic says 17% in Norway said they did not believe in a God or gods souls spirits or lifeforce.
    It is in agreement with other surceys which you have been shown. You cant twist the stats to suit your own personal belief.

    Gallup 2005
    26% as atheists,
    29% counting themselves as believing in a church or deity
    45% not being entirely certain
    Do you define atheism as the lack of belief in a God or gods, or do you define atheism as materialism?

    i define it as in page 11 of the nones survey When asked about the existiance" of god or gods the reply is "there is none"

    marienbad wrote: »
    ISAW, the oxford dictionary gives us the following definition for totalitarian

    ''relating to a system of government that is centralized and dictatorial and requires complete subservience to the state''

    and that subservience applies to churches, political parties, trade unions, newspapers, sports organisations , everything and anything that could engender dissent.

    One could use your arguments just as easily to make a separate case for the supression of political parties or unions etc . Particularly with political parties as such parties are usually eliminated first and in their entirety whereas religion is allowed to continue but under terrible difficulties.

    Indeed in Germany the Nazi Party is banned and any Nazi symbols.
    I don't think we should do that . nor should we suppress atheists. Atheists should be given the same rights as religious people to have their own ethos schools if they want them.
    The key issue is the supression of dissent is it not ?
    Yes and as an anti authoritarian i oppose suppression of dissent. People have a right to disagree.
    Why privilege one organisation over another ?

    It isn't a case of privileged. it is a case of satisfying needs and wants. If atheists want a school let them have one if they are prepared to support it. If disabled people need a ramp get them one even of non disabled wont use it.
    In all those ''atheistic regimes'' ''there is no God regimes'' you are so fond of listing can you name one that tolerated political parties as we know them ? trade unions ? Newspapers ?

    Yes the USSR . they has the Communist Party the Pravda newspaper and the workers state.

    If your point is "they were not atheistic they were just totalitarian" I have addressed that already. Non atheistic totalitarian regimes didnt kill at the level of the atheist ones.
    Why not?


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,463 ✭✭✭marienbad


    ISAW, those examples you quoted from the USSR are incorrect and I suspect you are aware of that- when there is only one ''political party'' there are no politival parties ( contradictory as that seems). The communist party were the totalitarian vehicle in the USSR and pravda was their mouthpiece.

    you say ''non atheistic totalitarian regimes did not kill at the level of atheistic one'' ! That is a bit of a stretch don't you think ? What regimes do you have in mind ?

    You misunderstand my point about one organisation being privileged over another. That was made it reference to the definition of totalitarianism , why do you privelege religion over say- trade unions of political entities in your analysis of totalitarianism ?


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,457 ✭✭✭Morbert


    ISAW wrote: »
    what i think has nothing to do with it! Others claiming Norway is 70% atheist is what
    others claimed:
    2119 Which says "according to their latest census over 70% of Norway is atheist"
    That just isn't true!

    1. it isnt a case of balance it is a case of the person making the claim supporting that claim!

    2. the 28% saying they believe in a god does not mean 68% or 70% do not believe in a God

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005 17% answered that "they do not believe there is any sort of spirit, God, or life force".

    Approximately 9-10% are probably not members of any religious or philosophical communities, while 8.6 % of the population are members of other religious or philosophical communities outside the Church of Norway.
    http://www.ssb.no/english/subjects/07/02/10/trosamf_en/

    17% are materialists. Atheists are not materialists, and can believe in spirits, souls, and life-forces. Similarly, atheists, like myself, can be agnostic, or "not entirely certain". The only demarcation is whether or not you believe "God/gods exist" is true.
    Norways own statistics Religious and life stance communities, 1 January 2011

    In 2005, a survey conducted by Gallup International in sixty-five countries indicated that Norway was the least religious country in Western Europe, with 29% counting themselves as believing in a church or deity, 26% as being atheists, and 45% not being entirely certain.

    That's about a quarter atheist not a majority and not 70% and it is the most atheist country in Europe.
    1.7% are Humanist 13% are nones.

    Do you believe I am an atheist?
    NO he is NOT!
    He is saying if 32% say they believe in a God then the rest are all atheist!
    http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=76817865&postcount=2123

    Yes I am. The other 70% have described themselves as not believing in a God.
    If your point is "they were not atheistic they were just totalitarian" I have addressed that already. Non atheistic totalitarian regimes didnt kill at the level of the atheist ones.
    Why not?

    This old chestnut again? I invite anyone to slog through my conversation with ISAW to note the numerous times I have explored why the totalitarian regimes in question were so barbaric, and why they chose to adopt atheism.

    Furthermore, it is not true that Non atheistic regimes didn't kill at the same level. Leopold of Belgium, Nazi Germany, Muslim-Hindu atrocities, the war in Vietnam, the colonisation of the new world Etc. were all in the millions or tens of millions.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,182 ✭✭✭Genghiz Cohen


    ISAW, in my mind you either believe a god exists or you don't. It's a yes/no answer, you can not be sure but still believe, but you still believe.

    So if someone says that if a group of people were asked a question like "Do you believe in a god/diety?" and 30% of the answers were "Yes" then, necessarily, the rest of the answer are "No".

    And if you answer : "Do you believe in a god/diety?" with No, then you are atheist.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,686 ✭✭✭✭PDN


    ISAW, in my mind you either believe a god exists or you don't. It's a yes/no answer, you can not be sure but still believe, but you still believe.

    So if someone says that if a group of people were asked a question like "Do you believe in a god/diety?" and 30% of the answers were "Yes" then, necessarily, the rest of the answer are "No".

    And if you answer : "Do you believe in a god/diety?" with No, then you are atheist.

    While I think this whole thread is going down the toilet fast, that isn't necessarily so.

    For example, if you ask people "Do you believe in a God?" Then a Pantheist, an Agnostic or even a Polytheist might well answer 'No'.

    The same survey showed a majority believe in some form of God, lifeforce or spirit. That would mean only a minority of the population are monotheists, but it certainly doesn't mean that a majority are atheists.


This discussion has been closed.
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