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Why I secretly root for Atheists in Debates

135

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,930 ✭✭✭✭Penn


    Onesimus wrote: »
    But this not about God right now, this about atheism and the claim that atheists are born that way. We need proof Sonic. Scientifically Prove to me you were born that way.

    And again, the proof can easily be shown geographically and historically. People born thousands of years ago in Greece to Greek parents believed in the Greek gods. People born at the same time in Rome to Roman parents believed in the Roman gods. People born today in Christian countries to Christian countries believe in the Christian God. People born today in Jewish countries to Jewish parents believe in the Jewish God. People born today in Muslim countries to Muslim parents believe in the Muslim god.

    People born today in rainforest tribes who have never heard of any of those gods, are never born with a belief in those gods. Why? Because it's not something you're born with. It's something you're taught. Nobody from a tribe in the Amazon would suddenly decide that he believes in God, because he's never heard of God. He'd never suddenly decide that he wants to become a Mormon because he doesn't know what Mormonism is.
    Onesimus wrote: »
    Science has not found an atheism gene has it? so where is the proof we are born that way?

    There's no atheism gene either, there is no gene about religion whatsoever. It's something you're taught by parents and society.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,058 ✭✭✭✭28064212


    Onesimus wrote: »
    Science has not found an atheism gene has it? so where is the proof we are born that way?

    I am here being inquisitive about atheism. and the claim that you are born that way. Your the one making the claim, so give me proof and convince me.
    I'll prove it when you prove that Allah doesn't exist.

    Do you not understand the burden of proof? It's a pretty classic logical fallacy. Note the word that's bolded. It means that if I claim there is an invisible purple unicorn in front of me, it's up to me to prove it's there, not for other people to prove it's not there.

    Of course, if you do understand it, then you're just trolling

    EDIT: Dammit Dave!

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,055 ✭✭✭Onesimus


    King Mob wrote: »
    Prove you were born not believing in bigfoot or the Loch Ness monster or any of the Hindu deities.

    And while you're at it, please show us how you have disproven these things exist to show us that doing such a thing is possible.

    Unless of course you are asking us for stuff you can't provide yourself, cause that would be kinda dishonest.

    Stop sidetracking and turning the tables and answer the question and prove to me you were born that way.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,055 ✭✭✭Onesimus


    28064212 wrote: »
    I'll prove it when you prove that Allah doesn't exist.

    Do you not understand the burden of proof? It's a pretty classic logical fallacy. Note the word that's bolded. It means that if I claim there is an invisible purple unicorn in front of me, it's up to me to prove it's there, not for other people to prove it's not there.

    Of course, if you do understand it, then you're just trolling

    EDIT: Dammit Dave!

    and if someone makes the claim that they born in such a way as you do, then burden of proof is on them also. So I'm being inquisitive. Prove to me you were born that way.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,055 ✭✭✭Onesimus


    Dave! wrote: »
    Onesimus, prove that there is not an invisible pink unicorn standing outside the building that you're currently in. Go for it.

    Provide proof that you were born that way. Come on seriously. how hard is it to do this? otherwise your living proof of someone with faith in practice but deciding to put it elsewhere.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 27,856 ✭✭✭✭Dave!


    Onesimus wrote: »
    Provide proof that you were born that way. Come on seriously. how hard is it to do this? otherwise your living proof of someone with faith in practice but deciding to put it elsewhere.
    I didn't say anything about being born any way, you can ask the others to address that if you like. I just asked you a straight question. Prove that there is not an invisible pink unicorn standing outside the building that you're currently in.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,035 ✭✭✭Sonics2k


    I love how you're blatantly ignoring Penn, who has explained it to you twice now.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,058 ✭✭✭✭28064212


    Onesimus wrote: »
    and if someone makes the claim that they born in such a way as you do, then burden of proof is on them also. So I'm being inquisitive. Prove to me you were born that way.
    Firstly, it's not my claim. Secondly, you can't claim that a lack of belief is a position that needs evidence. My dog is atheist. My table is atheist. The one-celled fertilised egg is atheist. I can't prove that they don't have a belief. Your position that the one-cell egg does have faith is exactly equivalent to claiming that tables have faith when they are "made"

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  • Posts: 25,874 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Onesimus wrote: »
    Stop sidetracking and turning the tables and answer the question and prove to me you were born that way.
    Simple. You were born not believing in other fictional entities.
    You weren't born believing in Bigfoot or the Loch Ness monster or the hindu gods.
    The only difference is you were raised to believe in one particular fictional entity.

    Now the thing is Onesimus you're the one who is sidetracking, since the article you posted made and then you repeated the common canard that atheists need to prove that God does not exist to have a point.

    So I'm just asking you to do what you are asking us.
    Prove to us some fictional entity does not exist.
    It should be a trivial matter, yet you and others who repeat that nonsense argument seem to have issues doing that.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,930 ✭✭✭✭Penn


    Sonics2k wrote: »
    I love how you're blatantly ignoring Penn

    Penn doesn't love it...


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,681 ✭✭✭Standman


    Onesimus wrote: »
    Stop sidetracking and turning the tables and answer the question and prove to me you were born that way.

    Babies cannot comprehend the idea of god, or even belief. There's your proof.

    The alternative is that new born babies believe in god, in this case specifically the Christian god.

    Do you often have theological discussions with babies?


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 25,606 Mod ✭✭✭✭Dades


    Onesimus - contribute something useful to your own thread or I'm closing this travesty.

    I don't know whether you're trolling or panicking but your replies are just nonsense questions asked to sidestep giving any relevant answers.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,753 ✭✭✭fitz0


    Dave! wrote: »
    Onesimus, prove that there is not an invisible pink unicorn standing outside the building that you're currently in. Go for it.

    Where's your scientific proof that Onesimus is in a building? :pac:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,218 ✭✭✭✭Bannasidhe


    Can I just say before Dades locks the thread (I have no 'faith' that Onesimus will contribute something useful) that I like being 'mean' about the church - I revel in being 'mean' about the church.

    I love that I can be 'mean' about the church and there is not a damn thing they can do about it unlike in their 'glory' days when they would have burned me for being a heretic uppity women.

    So on behalf of all those who died for being 'mean' about the church - may I blow this *raspberry* at the Vatican accompanied by a 'nah, nah, nahnah, na - you can't touch me!'

    I did enjoy that :D


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 24,464 Mod ✭✭✭✭robindch


    Bannasidhe wrote: »
    may I blow this *raspberry* at the Vatican
    At a rugby international weekend a few years back, myself and a friend -- a catholic who converted to protestantism, the faithless hound! -- rented a car in Rome and more or less randomly found ourselves driving up the Via della Colciliazione, the large street that leads from the Tiber straight into Peter's Square. Suddenly noticing Peter's Basilica dead ahead, I settled back into first gear and, as one, we wound down our windows, developed a beatific smile and simply waved at everybody with that rather absent-minded palm-upwards-with-curled-fingers index-finger-faintly-extended wave that seems to be part of the papal job description, blessing the occasional passerby. Just before we had to make a 90 degree turn to avoid mowing down pedestrians on Peters Square itself, we drifted past a priest with a truly thunderous expression on his face, who tracked us as though his head were on ball-bearings. So I blessed him too. He looked like he needed it. And we both reckoned it was all very therapeutic for us too as we'd had pizza the previous evening in that square with the statue of Giordano Bruno.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,218 ✭✭✭✭Bannasidhe


    robindch wrote: »
    At a rugby international weekend a few years back, myself and a friend -- a catholic who converted to protestantism, the faithless hound! -- rented a car in Rome and more or less randomly found ourselves driving up the Via della Colciliazione, the large street that leads from the Tiber straight into Peter's Square. Suddenly noticing Peter's Basilica dead ahead, I settled back into first gear and, as one, we wound down our windows, developed a beatific smile and simply waved at everybody with that rather absent-minded palm-upwards-with-curled-fingers index-finger-faintly-extended wave that seems to be part of the papal job description, blessing the occasional passerby. Just before we had to make a 90 degree turn to avoid mowing down pedestrians on Peters Square itself, we drifted past a priest with a truly thunderous expression on his face, who tracked us as though his head were on ball-bearings. So I blessed him too. He looked like he needed it. And we both reckoned it was all very therapeutic for us too as we'd had pizza the previous evening in that square with the statue of Giordano Bruno.

    I love St Peter's. It's a monument to bad taste and proof that money cannot buy style.

    My favourite has to be the Pope John XXII who was preserved by being 'waxed' (similar to the method used to preserve Lenin and Eva Peron). I had to be dragged away from that.

    mike-fj40-john.jpg?w=300&h=225


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,463 ✭✭✭marienbad


    Onesimus wrote: »
    Stop sidetracking and turning the tables and answer the question and prove to me you were born that way.

    Just for arguments sake Onesimus you could prove the above and could also prove the existance of God, that would apply to all gods would it not ?

    So how would you prove the existance of the one true God above all others ?


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 24,464 Mod ✭✭✭✭robindch


    Bannasidhe wrote: »
    I love St Peter's. It's a monument to bad taste and proof that money cannot buy style.
    I gather too that the colonnade around the square is made from marble stolen from the Coliseum by some 14/15th century pope. Haven't heard that the Vatican has ever offered to return it, or make good the damage it did (good heavens, what kind of a precedent would that set!?)
    marienbad wrote: »
    So how would you prove the existance of the one true God above all others ?
    You apply Anselm of Canterbury's Ontological argument and retire to a safe distance. Safe from logic anyway.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,218 ✭✭✭✭Bannasidhe


    robindch wrote: »
    I gather too that the colonnade around the square is made from marble stolen from the Coliseum by some 14/15th century pope.

    and we won't even mention their fundraising activities of selling 'less time in purgatory' shares...I mean indulgences....!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,463 ✭✭✭marienbad


    robindch wrote: »
    I gather too that the colonnade around the square is made from marble stolen from the Coliseum by some 14/15th century pope. Haven't heard that the Vatican has ever offered to return it, or make good the damage it did (good heavens, what kind of a precedent would that set!?)You apply Anselm of Canterbury's Ontological argument and retire to a safe distance. Safe from logic anyway.

    Are you saying God is a cancer !!:)


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 27,856 ✭✭✭✭Dave!


    marienbad wrote: »
    Just for arguments sake Onesimus you could prove the above and could also prove the existance of God, that would apply to all gods would it not ?

    So how would you prove the existance of the one true God above all others ?

    That's when faith comes in.

    Logic and rational argument is well and good, but once they've been stretched as far as they can go, it's handy to have faith to fall back on.

    I find that's the approach many more vocal theists seem to take. They make a superficial attempt at presenting an actual argument that supports their belief, and when that's inevitably destroyed they end up retreating to "faith".

    Then a new thread is started, or a new debate begins, and they start the whole process all over again.

    It would save everyone's time if they just skipped straight to "faith" from the start.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,256 ✭✭✭Andrewf20


    Onesimus wrote: »
    But Atheists have the burden of proving Gods non-existence as well and retain faith too. So one can say there is no logic in their faith and not believing in God.

    I think this is a very good video related to this issue:



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 17,485 ✭✭✭✭Ickle Magoo


    Onesimus wrote: »
    Can you prove you were born that way?

    Yes - my parents witnessed it first hand.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,870 ✭✭✭doctoremma


    How can anyone not understand the concept of " burden of proof" (even if they haven't come across the phrase)?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,218 ✭✭✭✭Bannasidhe


    Yes - my parents witnessed it first hand.

    My mother still has the receipts for my very expensive education in a non-religious school which was her only real option after it became very clear when I was all of seven years old that I hadn't bought into Catholicism at all and no amount of telling me about Baby Jesus was going to change that or detentions or writing lines or phone calls from the Mother Superior or chats with the bishop...

    She took me out of the State national school (run by nuns) before I got myself expelled for persistant questioning of dogma doctrine and declaring 'that doesn't make sense!'

    Edit to add:
    My granddaughter started school last year, this was the first time she encountered religion and the idea of an all powerful God (despite the fact that her maternal grandfather is a member of opus dei).

    She has questioned believers and non-believers as she tried to get her head around this whole concept (she's that kind of child - logical, literal and like a dog with a bone when she is pursuing her enquires). Her conclusion - she does not believe there is a God.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,716 ✭✭✭LittleBook


    atheists can agree objective moral values, along the lines of 'don't harm others', 'don't steal', 'don't kill' and so forth. How are these values less objective than - say - the ten commandments?

    I watched The Ten Commandments the other day (cracking story) and it struck me that there were clearly functioning societies before Moses went for that walk up the mountain.
    Onesimus wrote: »
    Stop sidetracking and turning the tables and answer the question and prove to me you were born that way.
    Onesimus wrote: »
    But this not about God right now, this about atheism and the claim that atheists are born that way. We need proof Sonic. Scientifically Prove to me you were born that way.
    Yes - my parents witnessed it first hand.

    I have been involved in an experiment for the past 16 years. I took a child and I did not indoctrinate her into any faith, neither did I teach her anything about atheism. She went to school in France where neither atheism nor theism was taught as part of the curriculum and the subjects were simply not part of our daily dialogue (apart from questions prompted by external interference in my experiment :rolleyes:).

    Et voila! Today she is an atheist agnostic with a penchant for studying religion (expects to get 100% in her leaving certificate) and a passion for mythology.

    QED :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,218 ✭✭✭✭Bannasidhe


    LittleBook wrote: »





    I have been involved in an experiment for the past 16 years. I took a child and I did indoctrinate her into any faith, neither did I teach her anything about atheism. She went to school in France where neither atheism nor theism was taught as part of the curriculum and the subjects were simply not part of our daily dialogue (apart from questions prompted by external interference in my experiment :rolleyes:).

    Et voila! Today she is an atheist agnostic with a penchant for studying religion (expects to get 100% in her leaving certificate) and a passion for mythology.

    QED :)

    Think you meant 'I did not indoctrinate her into any faith' ;)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,716 ✭✭✭LittleBook


    Bannasidhe wrote: »
    Think you meant 'I did not indoctrinate her into any faith' ;)

    D'oh. Cue "freudian slip" accusations. :)


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 24,464 Mod ✭✭✭✭robindch


    LittleBook wrote: »
    I have been involved in an experiment for the past 16 years.
    Likewise, but for the last five years -- not a word one way or the other about religion, god, the pope, priests etc. And on the odd occasion we do go into a church/see priests/interact with religion somehow, she gets just the plain facts; no spin and no emotional kicking or shoving and especially no insults, jokes or threats.

    But even at the gentle age of five, snowflake has already been pressured into religious belief, mostly recently a couple of weeks back by Popette (about whom much anon) who told snowflake that she couldn't love anybody properly unless snowflake believed that god exists. Thanks, Popette! Anyhow, snowflake said that she certainly could love people like mummy and daddy and anyway Popette "was stupid and boring" and "what was wrong with her when she said silly things like that?"

    Popette only has herself to blame for that one.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 17,485 ✭✭✭✭Ickle Magoo


    Bannasidhe wrote: »
    My mother still has the receipts for my very expensive education in a non-religious school which was her only real option after it became very clear when I was all of seven years old that I hadn't bought into Catholicism at all and no amount of telling me about Baby Jesus was going to change that or detentions or writing lines or phone calls from the Mother Superior or chats with the bishop...

    Lol, that's gas. :D

    My folks still laugh about the toddler who looked at them like they had three heads whenever anyone/they tried to describe gods or heavens or miracles...at 4/5 I said I didn't think there was such a thing as a god. To ensure their moral obligations were fulfilled (except they're pretty much agnostic so it was really, I learnt in later years, to get a lie in) when we were 5 we were duly sent to sunday school. Apparently I protested so much my dad said it only had to be until I could come up with a decent reason why I shouldn't be there. It took all of a couple of weeks for me to come up with the now infamous "If god made everything, and everything important is in the bible, why are there no mention of dinosaurs in the bible?" question that spelled the end of lie ins for my poor parents. :pac:


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