magicbastarder wrote: » there's no question i hate more than the 'so did you watch the match?' from the taxi driver when you get into the taxi.
nthclare wrote: » lol and you're a moderator who suggests argue the topic and don't get personal with the poster. Another example of your inability to be able to be civil and have some banter without getting personal. I suppose next you'll be telling me not to discuss moderation in the thread and bring it to the feedback page. You seem to get personal with me frequently and suggested that I'm not in the top 6 on your resentment radar or people you tend to put in their place or be watching now and again... Looks like you're a law onto yourself here, cracking the aul whip... Yada yada yada... For someone who's a moderator you sure don't have the ability to put principles before personalities...
YouTalking2me wrote: » As a complete outsider reading this thread bored at work, you just look like a bit of a sensitive sally to be honest, but that's none of my business.
nthclare wrote: » Lol not at all, she's always telling people to behave and carding people because she's overtly sensitive herself. She's had quite a few digs at me over the years and this is the first time I responded to her and she gets another moderator to send me a private message for being uncivil. She's too strict and can give but can't take...I'm laughing here because I knew when I responded I'd get a private message within 3 minutes lol Believe you me I'm far from being triggered or sensitive
karlitob wrote: » And I think we agree on the actual experience - baptismal certs are required (legally or not)
nthclare wrote: » and the Taxi driver's were honest and reliable.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » Hope it's not a thinly veiled "everything was better before we let the blacks in" post.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » Baptismal certs are not required. You can opt in our out of religious instruction whether or not you have told the school what religion your child is, if any. Now we all know that many schools don't respect the letter never mind the spirit of the law on this, but it's got nothing to do with baptismal certs.
Bannasidhe wrote: » An afterlife would be nice. Winning the lotto would also be nice. I'm not gambling on either.
Pherekydes wrote: » No. Stop misrepresenting my position. Lack of faith is not faith. Lack of belief is not belief. I do not believe god exists. I am not convinced that she exists. You are deliberately misrepresenting my position.
antiskeptic wrote: » I'm an aempiricist. That means I lack a belief in philosophical empiricism (and a range of other naturalism-enabling philosophies).
antiskeptic wrote: » [...] I have a belief in a more satisfying explanation for the world around me.
robindch wrote: » Despite you claiming that you're not an empiricist, I'll bet you 50p that you'll still try to open a door before you go through it?
you believe whatever it is you believe for no other reason than it's personally "satisfying" suggests a sense of entitlement infinitely beyond us more careful, lesser mortals.
antiskeptic wrote: » and presumably want their belief system to hold sway in society. Kettle, pot, black abounds.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » We are perpetuating a system of education which [...] has caused endless division, sectarianism, discrimination and misery on this island and continues to do so to this day.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » ...and we're back to the old "secularism = antitheism" guff.
What secularists don't want is the perpetuation of religious dogma through our statute book and constitution, and the warping of public services to pander to religion(s) and be used as a means to proselytise to citizens, frequently the vulnerable, ill or very young.
We are perpetuating a system of education which is not only not fit for purpose today, but has never been fit for purpose and was found to be so comprehensively unfit as far back as 1831. It has caused endless division, sectarianism, discrimination and misery on this island and continues to do so to this day. But RCC and CoI like it so we are stuck with it in this democracy of sorts.
antiskeptic wrote: » We're back to displacing one thing involving replacing it with another thing. Nature abhorring a vacuum and all
Naturally you believe your system to be better. But it can't be proven to be thus. Its mere belief you have about it. I mean, if you are, by faith, an empiricist, you'll view as better, an education system that promotes this world view.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » It's proven that education systems which do not segregate and discriminate on the basis of religion (or indeed anything else) lead to better outcomes in society. You want to perpetuate a sectarian and class-ridden system which leads to better outcomes for a few.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » For me it is not about having "faith" in one system over the other. It is simply that I experience that one system performs better than another.
For example if I go to the top of a building I can hear voices in my head telling me I can fly, and I might decide to pretend those voices come from certain sources, or believe they come from certain sources, or both. Or I can use a system of observation, data collation, and prediction to see what normally happens to things I throw off the side of a building. After this process it is not that I have "faith" in the empirical method.... or that I "believe" that I can not fly. It is simply that given all I have observed, my best educated guess is that no matter what the voices in my head might be telling me.... if I go off the side of the building I will travel down not horizontally or up.
I do not have faith in the empirical methods therefore. I do not have faith there is or is not a god either. I simply go based on the experiences that one methodology has consistently afforded results. One methodology simply has not. Even once. Ever.
Were that data set to change, I would happily change with it, not being wedded to any world view in particular. Certainly not so wedded that I define myself as being "right" by default and then define myself as being "anti" anyone who is sceptical of my assertions and declarations by first principle default.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » Always nice to have people tell me what I think or believe, especially after me saying what I think and believe and what they tell me is the opposite. But once again, when you are the kind of person who declares themselves correct by default and that you are on first principles against sceptics of your own assertions... that is the kind of thing we can expect. Observation, prediction, test and repeat. The same method strikes again. Tell us your faith as you wish. You do not get to invent one vicariously for me and tell me I have it when I don't. I explained my position. You can invent another one for me to talk past me if you like, or you can engage maturely and honestly with the one I actually tell you I hold. However, all that said, it is nice to see that your ignoring my posts is contrived and select, rather than absolute.
antiskeptic wrote: » You conclude no God via whatever elements go into making up your worldview.
antiskeptic wrote: » you operate from the position that all reality is empirically approachable in principle, that that is the measure against which all else is to be assessed.
antiskeptic wrote: » Quite how you think we've moved beyond a class system is, well, beyond me.
Peatys wrote: » Childhood cancer is all i need to know about your god
nthclare wrote: » You're trying to get a response where over 50 people thanked this post without the poster getting an infraction and you think you can get anywhere trying to convince regular posters that God exists... This is what is thought of your belief system. They don't believe in God, but yet a percentage undermine children with cancer by bringing religion into it. No doubt plagerised from some jumped up superstar Atheist they adore. I don't understand why people post this gibberish...