Fluffy, on 2013-October-14, 09:41, said:
Were there anyone else on the believers side besides the troll?, I haven't payed much attention. It seemed like the usual thing here, a hoard of of atheist trying to put down an impenetrable wall of beliefs. And the usual stuff from Mikeh.
To be honest I almost upvoted a post from mikeh quoting the troll, but anyway when you are heavily outnumbered there is little sense on wasting energies against the opposition of your opposition. and for the most part I ignore the trolls.
Sorry to be so predictable.
I readily admit to having strong convictions, and am always happy to be challenged on them. I really do like learning where I am in error, since then I have increased my understanding of the topic. However, to this day, having read everything that all the religious moderates have written, it still seems to me that all believers believe because they choose to believe and not because they have any rational basis for satisfying themselves that their core beliefs are grounded in reality.
I and others have, many times, posted arguments based on historical fact, as best as we can determine historical fact. For example, the current state of the art in terms of biblical history shows very clearly that many of the stories in the OT are adaptations of similar stories from older religions. Other stories are inconsistent with archeological evidence: there is zero evidence of the presence of any significant number of Jews in Egypt for any length of time, as one example.
Getting to the NT, the gospels appear to have been written at least 2 or 3 generations after the events said to be described. Moreover, both the gospels that ended up as the NT and those that were, hundreds of years later, rejected, contain many contradictions, and even where there is broad agreement, some of the stories can also be traced to similar stories in other, earlier, religions.
None of the religious believers who post here EVER, and I mean EVER debate these issues.
At most we get the argument that many parts of the bible are not supposed to be taken literally.
This begs the question: why should ANY if it be taken literally?
Why doesn't any moderate discuss how it is that in the Christian Church, what has happened is that from time to time it becomes impossible for any but the fanatics like the troll to maintain that a certain story, previously held to be factual is actually true. So that part becomes allegorical or metaphorical.
With the advance of fact-based knowledge, the parts of the bible that are now said, by moderates, to be true have shrunk. In no other area of human interest would we find such an incredible adaptive mechanism in play. In any other area, after formerly key aspects of doctrine are found to be incompatible with reality, the doctrine would be discarded in its entirety.
However, in religion, the belief meme is so strong, and so pervasive, that the victim has no trouble rationalizing away the pesky contradictions between evidence and the holy teachings.
To the point that the victim of the meme doesn't even appear to recognize what is going on. It would be funny if it were not for the fact that religion is a very powerful force in society and that it is all too often, nowadays and historically, used to create hatred, fear, anger, discrimination and so on. These emotions would undoubtedly still be prevalent without religion, of course: tribalism/nationalism are just as bad and, not coincidentally, often go hand in hand, hence the old saying about 'god and country'
I sometimes regret that I come across as arrogant, but on other occasions I can't help but suspect that by calling me arrogant, the critic can justify to himself or herself a refusal to engage with me on the merits of the points I make.
After all, if I am just being my usual arrogant self, why stoop to paying attention to the content of my posts? Just call me arrogant, ignore the issues, and continue feeling good about oneself.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari