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The Origin of Specious Nonsense. Twelve years on. Still going. Answer soon.

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Comments

  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,908 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    Absolam wrote: »
    Personally, I'm of the opinion that Ireland is a State which is secular (bar the odd bit of lip service here and there) in how it operates, influenced of course by a history that is primarily Christian and a population that continues to be largely Christian though significantly less religiously observant than in previous centuries, like most western nations. We're becoming more multicultural, pantheistic, and libertarian which seems to generally be an enriching experience all round.

    Without repeating all the debate going on in other threads, my opinion is that involvement of religious orders in running publicly funded schools and hospitals and laws against blasphemy preclude Ireland from being secular. I would consider we're becoming post-religious more so than pantheistic, as religion for many seems little more than a lingering cultural artefact.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,497 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    smacl wrote: »
    Without repeating all the debate going on in other threads, my opinion is that involvement of religious orders in running publicly funded schools and hospitals and laws against blasphemy preclude Ireland from being secular . . .
    As a matter of interest, is there any liberal democracy which you would consider secular?


  • Moderators Posts: 52,034 ✭✭✭✭Delirium


    J C wrote: »
    The change in attitiude as each conversation proceeded.
    The people interviewed were mostly self-professed atheists and science post grads or eminent scientists. They mostly changed from total confidence in both Evolution and the non-existence of God ... to much lower confidence in both ideas.

    So you'd no problem when the interviewer Godwinned the video?

    I.e. suggested that 'survival of the fittest' was what was happening as Hitler killed millions?

    If you can read this, you're too close!



  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,908 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    Peregrinus wrote: »
    As a matter of interest, is there any liberal democracy which you would consider secular?

    To be honest, I don't spend that much time looking at the ins and outs of religious involvement in other countries. From what I've read, France seems the most commonly referenced example, though laïcité does seem to be a more severe interpretation of secularism than that espoused by the National Secular Society which seeks balance between freedom of religion with freedom from religion. Personally, I'd favour the latter.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,497 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    smacl wrote: »
    To be honest, I don't spend that much time looking at the ins and outs of religious involvement in other countries. From what I've read, France seems the most commonly referenced example, though laïcité does seem to be a more severe interpretation of secularism than that espoused by the National Secular Society which seeks balance between freedom of religion with freedom from religion. Personally, I'd favour the latter.
    France provides public funding for church schools and church hospitals, though. Doesn't that rule it out, according to your criteria?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    smacl wrote: »
    Without repeating all the debate going on in other threads, my opinion is that involvement of religious orders in running publicly funded schools and hospitals and laws against blasphemy preclude Ireland from being secular. I would consider we're becoming post-religious more so than pantheistic, as religion for many seems little more than a lingering cultural artefact.
    My own feeling is that a State which refuses funding to organisations on the basis that they're religious isn't really secular at all, it's anti-theist. I'd agree that there are plenty of post religious people about, but I'll admit I was more thinking about how much more diverse Ireland has become; we now have many more religions, and a lot of them have adherants at least as fervent as the ones we're used to had at their height in this country. So the idea that we're post religious as a country would seem to me to be an erroneously narrow one. Maybe just post fanatically Catholic :)


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,908 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    Peregrinus wrote: »
    France provides public funding for church schools and church hospitals, though. Doesn't that rule it out, according to your criteria?

    I would consider France more secular than Ireland, in that public schools exclude religious instruction. Yes, it does provide funding for private religious schools, almost entirely Catholic AFAIK, but not public ones. This amounts to about 17% of school-going children, and has been the subject of criticism from secular organisations. My take on it as previously stated is that the ideal solution is to find a balance that is equitable and non-discriminatory for all concerned, which is clearly not the case in this country. Whether or not other countries do it better or worse is somewhat moot.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,594 ✭✭✭oldrnwisr


    J C wrote: »
    getting back on topic ... here is a video that explores the (lack of) evidence for Darwinian Evolution.

    Given that you've just dumped another link onto the thread JC, I'm not sure what this video is supposed to be an argument for. It certainly doesn't offer any positive evidence for your views. Neither does it offer any kind of challenge to the evidence for evolution. For the most part it is comprised of very selectively edited quote mined soundbytes coupled with Ray Comfort's juvenile and ignorant comments about his own twisted views on evolution.

    Comfort dishonestly quote mined the video to make it look as if his "challenges" went unanswered. As PZ Myers noted (emphasis his not mine):

    "I was one of those scientists. NO, I did not disagree with Dawkins about evolution or the evidence for evolution; NO, nothing I said provided any support to creationist claims; NO, there is not a lack of evidence for evolution.


    Further, in email correspondence Comfort admits to selective editing of the video (emphasis mine):

    "But in “Evolution vs. God” PZ gets to talk as much as or even more than anyone in the entire movie. Of course it was “selectively edited.” That’s what editors do. They remove the mundane and irrelevant and select that which is interesting–and a lot of what he said certainly was interesting. When I do interviews I fully expect to be cut back to that which the producers believe is relevant to their theme. After all, it’s their program."

    Comfort's theme is to misrepresent the scientists in the video in an act of, what Craig Stanford (featured in the video) calls biblical porn:

    "I know this will offend some people in the evangelical community who may be listening but that video to me is a great example of what I would call biblical porn. It's a whole set of images and words that are really intended mainly to titillate and excite evangelicals. There's actually no actual inquiry in that video into science vs. creationism,"

    PZ Myers explains the difference between what is seen and the video and what transpired in the interview:

    "Comfort came to me asking for the evidence for evolution. The way it went is that he would a) ask for evidence, b) I would give him an example (like the research on sticklebacks or bacteria), c) Comfort would raise an irrelevant objection (they’re still fish! They’re still bacteria!), and d) I would explain why his objection was invalid, and how his expectations of the nature of the evidence were wrong. Somehow, though, in the movie (d) always ended up on the cutting room floor, so that he could announce in all of his promotional materials and in the movie itself that I was unable to provide any evidence for evolution."

    Sources:

    Lie harder, little man
    Ray Comfort confesses
    USC Professor Craig Stanford Claims Ray Comfort’s ‘Evolution vs. God’ Documentary Is ‘Biblical Porn’


    Now, of course, even if we didn't have evidence of this kind of dishonesty on Comfort's part, he's still demonstrably wrong.

    The first five minutes or so of the video is taken up with rapid cuts of Comfort interviewing academics and undergrads about the evidence for evolution asking them for observable evidence of evolution. When, inevitably, most of the respondents direct him to the fossil record, Comfort responds that something which happened 65 million years ago is not observable and would require faith (which is of course wrong). Of course, we have examples of modern observed instances of speciation, like this one of a new species of mosquito being discovered in the London underground, having diverged from a surface population:

    Culex pipiens
    in London Underground tunnels: differentiation between surface and subterranean populations

    Of course, when Comfort is later confronted with similar examples by PZ, he responds with the cliched creationist response that: "but they're still fish" or "they're still bacteria" which shows just how clueless he is of what evolution is in the first place.

    There's nothing to see in this video. There's no inquiry or challenge for evolutionists and nothing but false hope for creationists.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,908 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    Absolam wrote: »
    My own feeling is that a State which refuses funding to organisations on the basis that they're religious isn't really secular at all, it's anti-theist.

    Hardly so if such religious organisations are the only provider of an essential service the state is mandated to provide for the vast majority of the population. This is clearly the situation in Ireland, where the vast majority of the population have no choice to avail of a state funded education other than one that imposes a religious ethos. This is not secular by any standards.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,908 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    oldrnwisr wrote: »
    There's nothing to see in this video.

    Thanks for that, that's 38 minutes not gone to waste here :)


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    smacl wrote: »
    Hardly so if such religious organisations are the only provider of an essential service the state is mandated to provide for the vast majority of the population. This is clearly the situation in Ireland, where the vast majority of the population have no choice to avail of a state funded education other than one that imposes a religious ethos. This is not secular by any standards.
    Well, such a discussion properly belongs on another thread, but I will point out that the State has no mandate to provide education in Ireland; it has a mandate to provide for education. Even if it did, it wouldn't change the fact that withdrawing support from schools on the basis that they're religious would be anti-theist.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,394 ✭✭✭✭Professor Moriarty


    Absolam wrote: »
    Well, such a discussion properly belongs on another thread, but I will point out that the State has no mandate to provide education in Ireland; it has a mandate to provide for education. Even if it did, it wouldn't change the fact that withdrawing support from schools on the basis that they're religious would be anti-theist.

    Or pro-secularisation depending on your perspective. I would have no problem with the state providing a school down the road where religion would not be involved in any way and then withdrawing funding from the religious school.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Or pro-secularisation depending on your perspective. I would have no problem with the state providing a school down the road where religion would not be involved in any way and then withdrawing funding from the religious school.
    I's say pro secularisation would be providing funding to schools regardless of their religious stance, since a secular State is supposedly neutral in matters of religion, neither supporting or opposing. Hence the fact that a State which withdraws funding from a religious school and provides it to a secular school isn't secular; it's not acting neutrally, it's acting anti-theistically, and a person who has no problem with that doesn't have a secular view, they have an anti-theist view.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,394 ✭✭✭✭Professor Moriarty


    Absolam wrote: »
    I's say pro secularisation would be providing funding to schools regardless of their religious stance, since a secular State is supposedly neutral in matters of religion, neither supporting or opposing. Hence the fact that a State which withdraws funding from a religious school and provides it to a secular school isn't secular; it's not acting neutrally, it's acting anti-theistically, and a person who has no problem with that doesn't have a secular view, they have an anti-theist view.

    I disagree. That would be the state adopting a neutral stance. Providing funding to religious schools is condoning religion - a pro-theist stance. Providing non religious schools is adopting a neutral or atheist stance. An anti-theist stance would be to punish self-funding religious schools.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,594 ✭✭✭oldrnwisr


    J C wrote: »
    Just like you seem to be wary of the RCC, because of what has happened in the past ... I'm just as wary of Secularism/Atheism ... for the very same reason.

    The evolution controversy in America, where scientists or teachers who questions its orthodoxy, are punished and/or litigated against is ominous for the freedom of religion and belief guaranteed by the US Constitution. This doesn't give me much confidence that the God-less 'secular eutopia' ... currently being constructued throughout the World will be a place that will respect me and my beliefs.
    Of course I could be wrong ... and I hope that I am ... but there is nobody giving me any assurance on this ... the reverse is actually the case.

    Well, you see here's the thing. I'm always somewhat bemused when religious people, particularly Christians condemn or otherwise express concern at secularism because it shows a remarkable ignorance of history.

    You see JC, it's not atheists you have to fear, it's your co-religionists, for the most part. It's the people who believe mostly what you do but not all the little details. You see, the history of Christian sects has been the history of one sect attaining some measure of power and using said power to persecute another sect. For example:

    • In 1554 in Ghent, David van der Leyen and Levina Ghyselins, two Dutch mennonites were killed by Catholic authorities.
    • In Glasgow in 1615, a Jesuit priest named John Ogilvie was hanged by Protestant authorities.
    • On October 31, 1731 Catholic Archbishop Leopold von Firmian issued an edict expelling 20,000 Lutherans from the city of Salzburg, many of whom froze to death while wandering the countryside trying to find new places to live.
    • In the textbook "The American Promise" the treatment of Quakers in New England in the 17th century is discussed noting:
      • New England communities treated quakers with ruthless severity. Some Quakers were branded on the face with a red-hot iron with an H for heresy. Some Quaker women were stripped to the waist, tied to the back of carts and whipped as they were paraded through the town. When Quakers refused to leave Massachusetts, Boston magistrates sentenced two men and a woman to be hanged in 1659.
    • In 1661, a Boston statute ordered that Quaker men and women be "stripped naked from the middle upwards and tied to a cart's tail, and whipped through town and branded with an R on the left shoulder."
    • Throughout the 16th century Catholics in France persecuted French Huguenots including a massacre of Huguenots at Sens in Burgundy in 1562. Eventually the right to religious freedom of Huguenots was guaranteed when the Edict of Nantes was passed in 1598. However, the growth of Catholic power and influence throughout the 17th century watered down those rights until the edict was formally repealed in 1685.


    Incidents like these and many, many, many others horrified the men who became the founding fathers of America. These men understood that secularism was a necessary bedrock of the new America so that one religious group could not be allowed to hold power sufficient to inflict the kind of persecution that had happened up to that point. Ben Franklin for example commented:

    "If we look back into history for the character of present sects in Christianity, we shall find few that have not in their turns been persecutors, and complainers of persecution. The primitive Christians thought persecution extremely wrong in the Pagans, but practised it on one another. The first Protestants of the Church of England, blamed persecution in the Roman church, but practised it against the Puritans: these found it wrong in the Bishops, but fell into the same practice themselves both here and in New England. To account for this we should remember, that the doctrine of toleration was not then known, or had not prevailed in the world. Persecution was therefore not so much the fault of the sect as of the times. It was not in those days deemed wrong in itself. The general opinion was only, that those who are in error ought not to persecute the truth: but the possessors of truth were in the right to persecute error, in order to destroy it. Thus every sect believing itself possessed of all truth, and that every tenet differing from theirs was error, conceived that when the power was in their hands, persecution was a duty required of them by that God whom they supposed to be offended with heresy."

    George Washington is of similar sentiments and expresses the problem more concisely:

    "Of all the animosities which have existed among mankind, those which are caused by a difference of sentiments in religion appear to be the most inveterate and distressing, and ought most to be deprecated."

    While Thomas Jefferson explicitly details why secularism is good for everyone:

    "Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between man & his god, ... that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, and not opinions, ... legislature should make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, thus building a wall of separation between church and state."

    Secularism isn't something which just protects atheists from religion JC, it also protects you from each other.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,908 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    Absolam wrote: »
    a secular State is supposedly neutral in matters of religion

    By whose definition? Again from the national secular society;
    We all share hospitals, schools, the police and the services of local authorities. It is essential that these public services are secular at the point of use so that no-one is disadvantaged or denied access on grounds of religious belief (or non-belief.) All state-funded schools should be non-religious in character, with children being educated together regardless of their parents' religion. When a public body grants a contract for the provision of services to an organisation affiliated to a particular religion or belief, such services must be delivered in a neutral manner, with no attempt to promote the ideas of that faith group.

    I'd tend to go with this in that I'd have no problem with the state funding schools run by religious organisations so long as those organisations did not use the school to promote their religion.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,594 ✭✭✭oldrnwisr


    Absolam wrote: »
    I's say pro secularisation would be providing funding to schools regardless of their religious stance, since a secular State is supposedly neutral in matters of religion, neither supporting or opposing. Hence the fact that a State which withdraws funding from a religious school and provides it to a secular school isn't secular; it's not acting neutrally, it's acting anti-theistically, and a person who has no problem with that doesn't have a secular view, they have an anti-theist view.

    Well that would depend on the actions of the patron body, wouldn't it?

    As you say, a secular stance is one which is neutral on religion. Therefore, the teaching of religion ought to be descriptive, teaching students what different religions believe without stating that any one religion is correct. Similarly such a school would have no faith formation since this has no bearing on education and simply exists to indoctrinate people into the religion.

    Another way to look at it is this. Let's say you have a public school (of the kind which is ostensibly practiced in the USA). This school has no faith formation, religion classes which are purely descriptive not prescriptive and no other religious or political leanings in its operation. It's as generic and vanilla a school as you're likely to come across. Its single focus is education. So, from a secular perspective, this school would receive state funding.
    Now, let's say you have a second school. This school is run by a religious organisation (it doesn't really matter which one). This school has token amounts of information about other religions in its curriculum and heavily promotes its own religion, teaching it as fact in its RE classes. This religious influence extends to other subjects too, such as downplaying the importance or evidence for evolution and cosmology. Also, a portion of the time is given over to faith formation for that religion and the school has entrance policies heavily stacked in favour of members of its own religion. My question is, on what logical basis does this second school have any entitlement to state funding? Why should the state pay to promote this or any religion?

    Further, your idea that a state which funds a secular school but refuses to fund a religious school is anti-theist not secular is wrong. If the state were to refuse funding from religious schools but allow funding for schools which actively denigrated the idea of religion and taught students that religion is bad or dangerous for society, then that would be anti-theist. A state which doesn't allow people to use state money to promote religion isn't anti-theist, it's secular.

    As I said, the question is not about who the patron of the school is but how religion is dealt with in the school. The state also has a responsibility to ensure uniformity of education that all children are educated to the same standard so that none are unfairly disadvantaged, like say being taught that evolution is "only a theory" or that believing things on faith is a good thing.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,927 ✭✭✭spacecoyote


    Just to touch back on a point that JC made earlier in the thread around what would atheists do if there was a God. It reminded me of this clip from Ricky Gervais, which I think is an accurate summation of what I feel most Atheists believe



    If you want to jump straight to the relevant point, its around the 3 minute mark.

    In a nutshell, if God is proven to exist, I would think that basically every Atheist would accept that.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,615 ✭✭✭✭J C


    Delirium wrote: »
    So you'd no problem when the interviewer Godwinned the video?

    I.e. suggested that 'survival of the fittest' was what was happening as Hitler killed millions?
    There was indeed historical use/abuse of the Theory of Evolution to justify, for example, the Nazi racist policies ... and indeed many eugenics initiatives in other countries in the 1920s and 30s.
    This is a historical fact.
    Indeed many Evolutionists say that whilst the basis of Darwinian Evolution is 'survival of the fittest' ... this principle shouldn't be applied to Human Beings as, in extremis, it would be grossly un-ethical and indeed immoral.


  • Moderators Posts: 52,034 ✭✭✭✭Delirium


    J C wrote: »
    There was indeed historical use/abuse of the Theory of Evolution to justify, for example, the Nazi racist policies ... and indeed many eugenics initiatives in other countries in the 1920s and 30s.
    This is a historical fact.
    Indeed many Evolutionists say that whilst the basis of Darwinian Evolution is 'survival of the fittest' ... this principle shouldn't be applied to Human Beings as, in extremis, it would be grossly un-ethical and indeed immoral.

    Dig up, Jc! Dig up 😋

    If you can read this, you're too close!



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,544 ✭✭✭Samaris


    J C wrote: »
    There was indeed historical use/abuse of the Theory of Evolution to justify, for example, the Nazi racist policies ... and indeed many eugenics initiatives in other countries in the 1920s and 30s.
    This is a historical fact.
    Indeed many Evolutionists say that whilst the basis of Darwinian Evolution is 'survival of the fittest' ... this principle shouldn't be applied to Human Beings as, in extremis, it would be grossly un-ethical and indeed immoral.

    Generally not just in extremis, but in quite ordinary circumstances too. S'why mostly people don't support the Nazis (that and all the genocide, mass killing and vegetarianism*, ofc)

    Tis a bit unrelated to the actual processes involved in speciation and evolution in general though.

    *that was a joke


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,615 ✭✭✭✭J C


    I disagree. That would be the state adopting a neutral stance. Providing funding to religious schools is condoning religion - a pro-theist stance. Providing non religious schools is adopting a neutral or atheist stance. An anti-theist stance would be to punish self-funding religious schools.
    The state is very happy to receive the taxes of religious people ... and then, if you had your way, pay the money back with secular 'strings attached' ... which amount to discrimination between schools with a religious and a non-religous / anti-religious ethos.
    Even in America and France ... with long histories of state-sponsored secularism this kind doesn't even wash.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,615 ✭✭✭✭J C


    Samaris wrote: »
    Generally not just in extremis, but in quite ordinary circumstances too. S'why mostly people don't support the Nazis (that and all the genocide, mass killing and vegetarianism*, ofc)

    Tis a bit unrelated to the actual processes involved in speciation and evolution in general though.

    *that was a joke
    One of the problems in the 1920's and 1930's is that there were Nazi-type policies pursued in many countries, and not just Germany ... and these policies used the 'scientific' theory of Evolution to justify these policies ... before it became politically toxic to continue with these policies, following the Nazi outrages.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 437 ✭✭Charmeleon


    Just to touch back on a point that JC made earlier in the thread around what would atheists do if there was a God. It reminded me of this clip from Ricky Gervais, which I think is an accurate summation of what I feel most Atheists believe



    If you want to jump straight to the relevant point, its around the 3 minute mark.

    In a nutshell, if God is proven to exist, I would think that basically every Atheist would accept that.

    The problem with most atheists is they don't know how to understand the phenomenon of religion. And I say that as an decades long atheist. They jump to a very simple conclusion before even examining the issues. They think it's all just individuals being hoodwinked or because they were once gullible children. There were very few publicly 'out' atheists even when I was growing up. Most of the people I went to school with were taught dogmatic religion and most of the older generation who have lost religion were taught the same.

    Many religious extremists find religion late in life, not because they are stupid or believed everything they were told as children, but because it became a huge part of their cultural identity for reasons other than gullibility. Most scientists, if you dig deep enough, believe something they know would be proven false but they own and cherish these false ideas and would think it immoral to challenge them.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,615 ✭✭✭✭J C


    Just to touch back on a point that JC made earlier in the thread around what would atheists do if there was a God. It reminded me of this clip from Ricky Gervais, which I think is an accurate summation of what I feel most Atheists believe



    If you want to jump straight to the relevant point, its around the 3 minute mark.

    In a nutshell, if God is proven to exist, I would think that basically every Atheist would accept that.
    If God were proven to exist, I think that most Atheists would reject Him using the Stephen Fry or Richard Dawkins ... rather negative opinions of Him.
    Quote Richard Dawkins:-
    "The God of the Old Testament is arguably the most unpleasant character in all fiction: jealous and proud of it; a petty, unjust, unforgiving control-freak; a vindictive, bloodthirsty ethnic cleanser; a misogynistic, homophobic, racist, infanticidal, genocidal, filicidal, pestilential, megalomaniacal, sadomasochistic, capriciously malevolent bully."

    ... and the 'piling in' against the idea, that goes on all over the world, when the evidence for Intelligent Design, for example, is provided ... is indicative that Atheists aren't as 'open-minded' or 'neutral' on the existence of God as Nicky Gervais suggests that they are.
    Remember that Intelligent Design is very much 'God lite' as it merely posits an intelligent source for life ... and still the Atheists reject it out of hand.
    They don't even say, lets look at the evidence and see if we can look at its deficiencies ... they simply reject it out of hand and threaten all kinds of sanctions against any scientist who associates themselves with it in any way. They even go to Court to have it legally 'stoppe in its tracks'. That isn't the behaviour of people who would accept the existence of God if it were proven to them.
    It's the behaviour of somebody who would continue to deny the existence of God ... even when His existence is proven beyond all reasonable doubt.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,858 ✭✭✭✭Timberrrrrrrr


    J C wrote: »
    I think that most Atheists would reject Him using the Stephen Fry or Richard Dawkins ... rather negative opinions of Him.

    But thats it right there, you THINK people.would reject him so in your mind that's exactly what would happen.

    If a "god" existed and showed himself to me tomorrow then I would gladly accept him into my life because it would be impossible for me to reject him after he has shown himself to me.

    I would also gladly accept unicorns, yeti's, aliens and people from leitrim if they actually existed:)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,615 ✭✭✭✭J C


    But thats it right there, you THINK people.would reject him so in your mind that's exactly what would happen.

    If a "god" existed and showed himself to me tomorrow then I would gladly accept him into my life because it would be impossible for me to reject him after he has shown himself to me.

    I would also gladly accept unicorns, yeti's, aliens and people from leitrim if they actually existed:)
    ... or so you say ... but would you really accept God, if He appeared to you? ... or would you simply say it was some kind of illusion / delusion that you suffered ...
    ... and just as importantly, what would your fellow atheists say about you, if you suddenly claimed that God appeared to you ... like some Roman Catholics claim about apparitions of Mary, for example?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,858 ✭✭✭✭Timberrrrrrrr


    J C wrote: »
    ... or so you say ... but would you really accept God, if He appeared to you? ... or would you simply say it was some kind of illusion / delusion that you suffered ...
    ... and just as importantly, what would your fellow atheists say about you, if you suddenly claimed that God appeared to you ... like some Roman Catholics claim about apparitions of Mary, for example?

    See JC you sit there and negate what I have just said, not very Christian of you btw when you don't know a thing about me. Why would I care what anyone else said/thought about me?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,615 ✭✭✭✭J C


    oldrnwisr wrote: »
    Secularism isn't something which just protects atheists from religion JC, it also protects you from each other.
    ... protect me from my erstwhile secular 'protectors' (who want to wipe religion off the face of the Earth) is all I'll say to that.:)


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,615 ✭✭✭✭J C


    See JC you sit there and negate what I have just said, not very Christian of you btw when you don't know a thing about me. Why would I care what anyone else said/thought about me?
    So what do you think of Roman Catholics who claim to see Mary ?
    Indeed, what do you think of people of all religions and none who have claimed to have seen apparitions/visions over the statue in Ballinaspittle, Co. Cork over the past 30 odd years?
    Your answer will show, just how supportive you are towards those who claim supernatural visions ... and by extension, how likely you would be to start proclaiming that you saw God, if He showed Himself to you.


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