JoeDawg said:
This is why atheists object when people say gods exist.
That is reasonable. I have the same problem with institutional realism. The problem is when people go from denying (physical) existence to obfuscating theological ideas and meanings because they dislike them, which is what you seem to be doing from this post.
Good then we agree, but then all you are talking about is conceptual thinking. Theology is just one manifestation of this, so it is not central to anything.
Except that it was a central basis for most thought and study for many centuries.
This is not what most people mean by spirit. You seem to have your own language... this is not a problem, except when you assume others understand your definitions.
How do you think "most people" understand spirit? What is meant by "school spirit" or "team spirit" or "to be in good spirits," or "to do something in the spirit of a patron founder?" All these expressions refer to a subjective state or frame of mind in doing something.
[/quote]Atheists don't object to personification, which is a function of their mind, they object when people confuse personification with what exists outside their mind.[/quote]
You are aware that you have no transparent access to anything outside your mind that doesn't involve the mediation of your mind, right?
Metaphors can be useful, as long as you don't confuse them with definitions.
Logic relies on definitions, poetry relies on metaphors.
Check out Lakhoff and Johnson's cognitive linguistics. They analyze the metaphorical structures of everyday language.
Who is to say monkeys won't fly out my butt?
You made a statement about Hitler. I responded in good faith and you say this?
Many do... but given that they are 'atheists', targeting religious institutions would seem to be their common interest... that is, showing how god-belief is bad.
I'm an atheist but I'm trying to salvage the baby from the bathwater of religion and theology. There are many good ideas if you can decipher them from the cynical interpretations you've been fed to lead you into anti-theism.
Since god-belief is irrational, being motivated by god, would not be rational. Irrational motivations rarely lead to rational decisions, so yes, it is rational.
This kind of if-then logic applied to abstract generalities only obfuscates valid thought. Both rationality and irrationality may result from theological study. It depends how people apply the idea of God. If God is applied as a means of superceding wordly authority with critical truth, it can lead people to overcome the tendency to submit blindly to irrational human authority, which increases rationality in human behavior.
That's crap. I didn't say religious people always make wrong decisions, when they base their decisions on gods. I said I don't trust them to make decisions, because their decision making process is flawed. That is not ad hominem.
Humans who can't overcome submitting to worldly authority are flawed in their critical ability. They are driven by fear of death and fear of not being powerful enough in themselves to challenge external power and authority.
Allowing evil to exist at all is not good, therefore god cannot allow evil to exist and be good.
Believing that it is good to eliminate evil from existence completely is bad. Evil exists as an inevitable dark side to the full range of possibilities available to humans as a result of their freedom and the way life works. Goodness lies in accepting the freedom of others to choose evil and intervening by providing knowledge and warnings instead of controlling them or manipulating them without enlightening them as to why.
God let Job suffer the loss of everything he cared about... because of a bet.
I used to say the exact same thing. But look at the message of the story. It is saying that as long as you don't give up faith in goodness through bad times, the rain cloud will always have a silver lining. Have you ever experienced that not to be true? If so, you're either not alive or you've never experienced something bad enough to necessitate hope and faith to make it through without going insane.
God couldn't forgive Adam for disobedience, so he cursed all humanity. Then God knocked up Jesus' mother, and convinced him to sacrifice himself for humanity. Once Jesus was tortured to death, god forgave humanity... except for those who don't believe in Jesus. Those people are still cursed to an eternity of being tortured.
Why was Jesus sacrificed? What was the cause of Jesus' death. If you don't want to read the bible, check out the movie Passion of Christ.
I also used to think that suffering was God's punishment for disobedience. This is a bad interpretation of these stories. Suffering is a direct result of sin, not punishment by God or anyone else. When someone kills, someone else dies. When someone steals, someone else loses property, etc. God just warns people of the consequences of sin and gets disappointed when they still harm each other. The story of the flood describes God's realization that humans are flawed and his promise not to kill them all ever again. The story of Jesus describes how humans' killing of another human is destruction of God's gift to them of each other. If you would look for the ethical messages in the stories, you'd get more out of them than with your cynical superficial interpretations.
The God of the bible is psychotic.
Then wouldn't the creation be his psychosis?
Then god is not absolute... so god is both good and evil.
That's why the emergence of Satan is described as God's greatest angel falling from grace. Satan is technically part of God; i.e. the part that fell to sin. The sin that caused the fall is actually logical, too - i.e. pride and opposition to God. Lucifer was supposedly so enamored by his own beauty as God's greatest angel that he became competitive with God's will. You could say that this describes the inherent temptation in having any kind of power to become self-glorifying and prideful instead of harnessing the power to do good.
Universals are derived from generalizations, that is where they get their value.
I gave you the example that all living humans have a heart. That is not a generalization, but it is universal. A generalization would be that all living humans have organs. Organs generalizes the existence of hearts, livers, kidneys, lungs, etc. All living humans having organs would be a universal generalization. All living humans having hearts would be a specific universal.
Theology is confusing, because it is self-contradictory.
It's only contradictory if you believe good and evil to be radically separate from each other. Theology acknowledge how the two are interwoven and connected. Theology also recognizes that individuals are capable of both good and evil in contrast to naive social philosophies that divide the world into good people and bad people. Sure it is comforting to believe that because you've done good things or are often good that you are a good person and don't ever have to worry about doing anything wrong. It is also comforting to think that as long as you avoid bad people, nothing bad will ever happen to you. Both are naive obfuscations of the reality of how moral choice works and how bad actions can emerge from good people with good intentions and vice versa.