|  01-26-2009, 09:09 PM | #241 | |
| Holy S**T!!!            Posts: 5,213 Karma: 108401 Join Date: Jun 2008 Location: San Diego, California!! Device: Kindle and iPad | Quote: 
 I am so crushing your head right now. (I'm cruuusssshing your head ..... )  And, oh yes .... Holy Trinity ... Jesus is supposed to be "God made flesh." Dead on. | |
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|  01-26-2009, 09:14 PM | #242 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 19,832 Karma: 11844413 Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: Tampa, FL USA Device: Kindle Touch | 
			
			HA HA! Karma to you for that one. Quote: 
 BOb | |
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|  01-26-2009, 10:25 PM | #243 | ||||
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 5,187 Karma: 25133758 Join Date: Nov 2008 Location: SF Bay Area, California, USA Device: Pocketbook Touch HD3 (Past: Kobo Mini, PEZ, PRS-505, Clié) | Quote: 
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 I treasure the few monotheists I know who are willing and able to thoroughly discuss religion with someone who doesn't share their basic concepts of how the universe works. Quote: 
 Sorting out which Christians are loving, tolerant and dedicated to everyone having a better life, and which are dedicated to *Christians* having better lives, and which are actively attempting to eliminate non-Christians from the planet (the politest ones only want to convert them all)... is generally more effort than I care to spend on other people's religions. At least during casual encounters. Quote: 
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|  01-26-2009, 11:11 PM | #244 | |
| *****            Posts: 335 Karma: 5759 Join Date: Mar 2006 Device: ***** | Quote: 
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|  01-26-2009, 11:20 PM | #245 | |
| *****            Posts: 335 Karma: 5759 Join Date: Mar 2006 Device: ***** | Quote: 
 OTOH, some christians (typically the more radical evangelicals) I have met are loud-mouthed, pushy, ignorant jerks who want to shove their religion down everyone's throat. In fact, they are some of the least moral folks I have known. I think it really depends on the individual. The problem is that radical beliefs attract radical people and radicals of any persuasion are not exactly known for their tolerance. | |
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|  01-26-2009, 11:26 PM | #246 | 
| Wearer of Pants            Posts: 1,050 Karma: 7634 Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: Norman, OK Device: Amazon Kindle DX / iPhone | 
			
			I'd just be angry cause it was a badly thought-out book with a terrible argument. Give me some of those classy old atheists... these new ones are morons and need to stick to their fields! I'm a pretty committed religious person, but don't mind a good argument as long as it's half intelligent. His book was, unfortunately, not. Otherwise... it's just one more of the crappy books that came pre-loaded. So it goes. | 
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|  01-27-2009, 12:48 AM | #247 | 
| Technologist            Posts: 488 Karma: 585237 Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: I'm between Cities Device: SONY Reader PRS-500 | 
			
			@ Gideon: What part of his arguments against faith were so atrocious? The part where children should not be sold into spiritual slavery? Telling people that they have a right to choose, and letting people know that "none of the above" is an option when it comes to religion? Could the fault lie in his assessment that saying "it's Turtles [my apologies for earlier] all the way down" is just as silly and indefensible as "Jesus told me to kill that doctor?" Maybe it was the part where he said that being a staunch "THERE IS NO GOD" atheist was rather as foolish as "THERE IS A GOD THERE IS A GOD" theists are? That last part made me really think. Here is a man whose work has been misunderstood by layman and turned into something as repugnant as social Darwinism (see Jeff Skilling & _The Selfish Gene_) pointing out the absolute folly of absolutism. What part of Dr. Dawkin's book was so unintelligent? Personally, I loved all the resources at the end for people who believed that there was no hope, and no way out of the cult into which they were bred. | 
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|  01-27-2009, 01:09 AM | #248 | 
| Wearer of Pants            Posts: 1,050 Karma: 7634 Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: Norman, OK Device: Amazon Kindle DX / iPhone | 
			
			Actually, I'm just as against that sort of thing as Dawkins.  The big problem with his book was his reductionism and his incessant straw-man arguments.  The same problem that exists with most the new atheists. I'm religious, but despise the sort of religion he talks about probably more than he does. But that's the whole point - plenty of people don't treat their religion like that, and most of his arguments were more or less nonsense in the end. If you're going to call religion those things he talks about and pretend like that is the bulk of it you're making a mistake. It's stupid to do and Dawkins is smarter than that. The problem is he is a biologist, not someone who actually studies religion and social science. There are plenty of arguments against religion, and it isn't that he doesn't use some of them, it's just he reduces all religion to that thing. Religion is like politics - it exists almost universally, right or wrong, and talking about how bad one or the other is doesn't stop the problems. Religion is something people do, and when you take religion away, something else fills its shoes (look at communist Russia or China, for instance) and it can be just as bloody and terrible (and just as often, worse.) There are plenty of good discussions about the problems with Dawkins books, and not from a religious perspective. It's bad philosophy. It's bad history. And it's bad social theory. It's the Ayn Rand of discussions of religion - no one in the fields he discusses (many atheists, I assure you) want anything to do with it. These guys are good at rhetoric throwing things around, but they are not saying anything all that rational (despite their beloved scientism). He acts just as badly, just as reductionistic as those theists he decries. Personally, I find these arguments tiresome... It's not provable one way or another and as long as people are decent I couldn't care less what they believe or don't believe. Of course religion is often dangerous and evil. So is everything people do, taken to extremes. But pretending the extremes is most of it while paying scant attention to what happens in the middle is just the same thing, dressed up in reason. I, and certainly most the religous people I associate with, would agree with most the criticisms these guys offer against religion and religious people. I'm in Oklahoma, for God's sakes.... you have any idea what kind of religious monsters I live around? But I know it's not all religious people. The people that run the center for children and families are religious, the people who run the organizations that rehabilitate drug addicts and prisoners are religious, the organizations (like the one I work for) that promote interfaith (and lack of faith) dialogue and social justice are ran by largely religious people... None of whom are trying to convert anyone. But ultimately... reductionism and straw man arguments. That's the crux of it. It's bad work for an academic and has more to do with a Jack Chick track than any sensible literature on the subject. I'd suggest Bertrand Russell for a good atheist read. Or Nietzsche (though he gets reductionist at times as well.) He's still offering more. | 
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|  01-27-2009, 01:30 AM | #249 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 4,395 Karma: 1358132 Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: UK Device: Palm TX, CyBook Gen3 | 
			
			He did write a few science books aimed at the layman ('The ABC of Relativity' for example).
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|  01-27-2009, 01:37 AM | #250 | |
| Wearer of Pants            Posts: 1,050 Karma: 7634 Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: Norman, OK Device: Amazon Kindle DX / iPhone | Quote: 
  Epistemology just bores the hell out of me! | |
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|  01-27-2009, 05:03 AM | #251 | 
| The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠            Posts: 74,432 Karma: 318076944 Join Date: Jul 2007 Location: Norfolk, England Device: Kindle Oasis | 
			
			Umm.. on Discworld the Turtles swim through space, they don't stand on each other.  But I was thinking of the now well-known anecdote. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turtles_all_the_way_down | 
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|  01-27-2009, 05:13 AM | #252 | 
| The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠            Posts: 74,432 Karma: 318076944 Join Date: Jul 2007 Location: Norfolk, England Device: Kindle Oasis | 
			
			I see you have repented. You are forgiven. Go, and sin no more.... (It's fortunate that arranging a burning take a fair bit of time.) | 
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|  01-27-2009, 05:44 AM | #253 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 1,178 Karma: 2431850 Join Date: Sep 2008 Device: IPad Mini 2 Retina | Quote: 
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|  01-27-2009, 05:56 AM | #254 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 7,452 Karma: 7185064 Join Date: Oct 2007 Location: Linköpng, Sweden Device: Kindle Voyage, Nexus 5, Kindle PW | Quote: 
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|  01-27-2009, 06:06 AM | #255 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 7,452 Karma: 7185064 Join Date: Oct 2007 Location: Linköpng, Sweden Device: Kindle Voyage, Nexus 5, Kindle PW | Quote: 
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