Jenyar said:My question exactly. What do you mean by "invisible non-entities"?
The supernatural. That which has been acknowledged by theists to exist.
Jenyar said:My question exactly. What do you mean by "invisible non-entities"?
I respect people that act with integrity.
I respect people who act in accordance with selfless regard for others.
I respect people who treat others with respect.
That's a broad generalization, and I would argue only in non-theistic circles would you find belief in non-entities, visible (but perhaps illusionary) or invisible.(Q) said:The supernatural. That which has been acknowledged by theists to exist.
Jenyar said:That's a broad generalization, and I would argue only in non-theistic circles would you find belief in non-entities, visible (but perhaps illusionary) or invisible.
It seems Q failed to realise the redundancy in the use of the term "invisible non-entity".Jenyar said:My question exactly. What do you mean by "invisible non-entities"?
And there might be a level on which all things are illusionary, but we would reach it as rarely as we reach a level where all things are real. We live (and think and act) absolutely in a relative space between seemingly arbitrary points (from our perspective). This living with our heads in the thin atmosphere above the clouds and our feet planted on terra firma is what we call existence, and that, however we manage to circumscribe it, is the reality we have to work with. I believe between subjectivity and objectivity - between the strategic and the parametric - we usually manage to find some meaning, and that is after all what communication is about.perplexity said:George Bernard Shaw said that
"The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place"
I would say the same of perception, what we like to call knowing.
--- Ron.
one_raven said:So subtle, in fact, that I am finding difficulty expressing it well.
invert_nexus said:Might as well get on your knees with the rest of the christian scum. You're already halfway there.
I think this will get us closer to the issue. Respect, like honour or virtue, is a social thing, and it would be logical to set the standard for it at a social (rather than personal) level. Like I said in the [post=1059484]Question of respect[/post] thread, we don't generally respect criminals, or expect anybody else to. But we may require ourselves to respect their basic rights (and here "respect" become almost a formal exercize, a mere skeleton). In a social sense, their actions may cause us to lose all respect for them, but the counterpoint to that is how we define our own human nature, how we respect ourselves and the things we would like others to respect in us.one_rave said:I do not have respect for views of people that will have an obvious negative effect on me or society as a whole, but if they are not hurting me, I can certainly respect their views and beliefs and them as a person, not despite, but because of their views.
Jenyar said:You mean, like atoms? Dark matter? Boson Higgs particles - and for a long time, black holes?
We wouldn't even be able to imagine our own consciousness just from observing the human brain.
God is notby nature part of nature, although He can (and according to Judaism and Christianity, has) enter it. He is therefore by all definitions of the word, an entity.
Jenyar said:I think this will get us closer to the issue. Respect, like honour or virtue, is a social thing, and it would be logical to set the standard for it at a social (rather than personal) level. Like I said in the [post=1059484]Question of respect[/post] thread, we don't generally respect criminals, or expect anybody else to.
KennyJC said:Atheists here simply lack the political correctness with religion which is rampant in the media and in politics. Shame you see it as a personal attack
KennyJC said:You mean you will believe anything that is in vague support of your irrational beliefs without realizing your beliefs are fucked up in the first place?
KennyJC said:as it is not often the person, but the beliefs themselves that quite rightly receive a lashing.
That was something that you said to me on another thread. Sounds like a personal attack me to me...
Why do our beliefs "quite rightly" deserved to be lashed? Because you don't agree with them?
Yes. People who exemplify what they're talking about seem more qualified and garner more trust. But I don't think that's the kind of respect one has for a criminal next door...perplexity said:A degree of respect might not be so amiss if you live next door to a criminal, to keep the doors locked and your eyes open.
A better notion to play with might be qualification. When somebody seems to think thay've something to tell me I like to know why, where they're coming from, and what they've done for themselves, what they have to show.
I notice this with marriage for instance: Friends keenest to tell me how it should be done are those with no marriage to show for themselves, and often those with nothing like a marriage to show for themselves, while those with a marriage to speak of, those who had to learn it the hard way, they're the keenest to keep their council to themselves, content to leave me to it.
I learn a lot about respect from that sort of thing, the back seat driver syndrome.
What you believe defines who you are.KennyJC said:People can not differentiate between a personal attack, and an attack on their faith.
KennyJC said:Simply put - it is bullshit. It stinks to high heaven and people around the world who believe the collection of myths associated with an organised religion are not doing pleasant things in society. I was force-fed your bullshit religion at school and more was taught about Noah's Ark and Adam and Eve than things that could actually constitute a good education. I have a hatred for the Christian right in America and the damage they are currently doing to our world via war, as well as fanatic Muslims who think it's ok to kill in defence of Islam. Aside from the damage religion does to politics, law, education, human rights, freedom and social health - the downright irrationality and lazy mindedness of it all is nothing short of pathetic.
I could probably write pages and pages on why religious beliefs deserve to be lashed.
MarcAC said:What you believe defines who you are.
If you attack a person's faith, you attack the person.
What you believe defines who you are.
If you attack a person's faith, you attack the person.