Well, there's certainly nothing in sight, but two or three hundred
years from now, who knows.
hence ....
they are instead sold the notion of "ok you are not happy now, but you will
be in the future"
Anyway, I would argue that the "powers" of humanity have solved the problem,
by creating religion. In other words, life doesn't have to be everlasting, the people just
have to believe it is.
A mere opinion about having a transcendental existence is as futile as an opinion that we
can hopefully attain such a state via technology in 300 or so years ....
That's the deal for everyone. Atheists are simply more willing to accept it.
On the contrary, that's the exclusive deal of atheism and their willingness to accept is
simply a consequence of having no other option . Kind of like saying the deal is that
everyone only gets to eat cactus and camels are simply more willing to accept it. I guess
the difference is that even atheists are mostly trying to avoid it as opposed to the camel
relishing the taste of its own blood.
I'm sorry, but how does a transcendental worldview explain that, and how does
atheism fail to?
Been dealt with numerous times but in short
how the transcendental view explains:
A Defense of Theodicy
The Purpose of Creation
and how the atheistic world view doesn't (or is relegated to the same bevy of
insurmountable obstacles that cannot be over come no matter how many resources are pumped
into the endeavour):
Envy - the final frontier
Atheist Fundamentalism and the Limits of
Science
The Inadequacy of Atheism
Foundation of scientific and technical thought
Actually, that would better describe the carrot-and-stick of monotheistic religion.
"Your life may suck now, but your reward will come in heaven."
granted that at the lower threshold of religious practice it can function like that ....
but the irony is that you have painted the upper threshold of atheists/gross materialists
in the same manner ("perhaps we can solve this problem in 300 years with technology" etc
etc)
It seems a bit unfair, because I feel like I have an unfair advantage here. As an
atheist, I grew up in a Catholic household, attended church and a Catholic school, have
known and still consider friends many religious people. So I know not only religion as it
was written, but how it is practiced by average people. You, on the other hand, seem to be
getting your information about atheism from other religious folks. I say that because I've
never known an atheist to submit to nihilism. The opposite of "God has a plan" has never
been "There's no point," in my experience. In fact, the only people I've ever heard say
that are religious people when considering the atheist position.
:shrug:
as I said there are two categories - seems like you are only familiar with the first
variety. Persons of the second type tend to be a bit more intellectual or knowledgeable of
the nature of conditioned existence to. I've met a few but they are certainly a lot more
rarer breed than your standard "I'm gonna go out there and acquire what I need to be happy"
sort of atheist. Posters like Crunchycat come to mind