Is It Just Me??

Discussions on a ranges of philosophical issues including the nature of truth and reality, personal identity, mind-body theories, epistemology, justification of beliefs, argumentation and logic, philosophy of religion, free will and determinism, etc.
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AttentionKMartShoppers
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Is It Just Me??

Post by AttentionKMartShoppers »

Can someone enlighten me as to why some atheists think appealing to majority opinion a way of determining truth? I never thought I'd see the day...but I have...
"My actions prove that God takes care of idiots."

He occasionally stumbled over the truth, but hastily picked himself up and hurried on as if nothing had happened.
- On Stanley Baldwin

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An atheist can't find God for the same reason a criminal can't find a police officer.

You need to start asking out girls so that you can get used to the rejections.
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Judah
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Post by Judah »

Hi KMart, glad to see you back.

Have you ever heard of weasel words? The answer to your question may be found in this definition and description. :wink:
Weasel words are words or phrases that seemingly support statements without attributing opinions to verifiable sources, lending them the force of authority without letting the reader decide whether the source of the opinion is reliable. If a statement can't stand on its own without weasel words, it lacks neutral point of view, and the lack of given sources also implies a verifiability issue. Either a source for the statement should be found, or the statement should be removed.

The emergence of weasel-worded statements often has its roots in biased or normative statements, e.g. "Montreal is the best city in the world". Often, people who are convinced that some statement or other is true naturally want to see it mentioned in the articles where it is relevant; however, statements such as these tend to jump out at the reader as obvious opinion-stated-as-fact and quickly get rooted out. The problem of the weasel words starts when an editor realises this and attempts to remedy the situation by modifying the statement to at least admit that it is not necessarily factual, e.g. "Some people say Montreal is the best city in the world."

At first glance, this rephrasing appears to have solved the problem - clearly "some people say" does not equate "it is a fact that". Yet it remains uninformative in a very fundamental sense, as the context of this statement is crucial to comprehending its significance, and none is provided. A few simple questions you could ask this editor strongly illustrate what the problem with that is:

Who says that? You?
When did they say it? Now?
How many people think that?
How many is some?
What kind of people think that? Where are they?
What kind of bias might they have?
Why is this of any significance?

The answers to these questions might very well strongly imply that in essence the statement contains no semblance of neutrality, verifiability, significance or any encyclopedic quality whatsoever - that "some people" stands for, e.g., three enthusiastic travel agents encountered by this single editor in 1998. The inclusion of unsourced statements in any text that aspires to be authoritative implicitly vouches for the unknown sources of these statements, and this can easily be exploited to spread hearsay, personal opinion and even propaganda under the guise of legitimate encyclopedic content. As the spirit of Wikipedia draws very strongly from the neutrality and verifiability policies, both of which are acutely compromised by this practice, editors are encouraged to Avoid Weasel Words.
After all, can an aetheist truly substantiate his point of view?
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AttentionKMartShoppers
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Post by AttentionKMartShoppers »

The King has returned!

Image
"My actions prove that God takes care of idiots."

He occasionally stumbled over the truth, but hastily picked himself up and hurried on as if nothing had happened.
- On Stanley Baldwin

-Winston Churchill

An atheist can't find God for the same reason a criminal can't find a police officer.

You need to start asking out girls so that you can get used to the rejections.
-Anonymous
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Judah
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Post by Judah »

Oh ? :shock:
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AttentionKMartShoppers
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Post by AttentionKMartShoppers »

Guy keeps on saying it's not a fallacy. And a new one: Say thing over and over again, no matter what the cost. Another atheist keeps on saying there's no justification for God's laws because He doesn't explain why something is right/wrong. No matter how many times I say that because the Bible doesn't say X, X doesn't by necessity not exist...
"My actions prove that God takes care of idiots."

He occasionally stumbled over the truth, but hastily picked himself up and hurried on as if nothing had happened.
- On Stanley Baldwin

-Winston Churchill

An atheist can't find God for the same reason a criminal can't find a police officer.

You need to start asking out girls so that you can get used to the rejections.
-Anonymous
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B. W.
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Post by B. W. »

AttentionKMartShoppers wrote:Guy keeps on saying it's not a fallacy. And a new one: Say thing over and over again, no matter what the cost. Another atheist keeps on saying there's no justification for God's laws because He doesn't explain why something is right/wrong. No matter how many times I say that because the Bible doesn't say X, X doesn't by necessity not exist...

Glad to see you back!

Ask them why they hate God. If they say they do not hate God - then why do they not spend equal time and energy to disprove Islam or Hinduism or any other religion?

What draws them to always single out and attack Christianity? If God is not real then why are they not in a bar or enjoying life however they will? No one is demanding that their rights be stripped of them or demanding that they cannot be involved politically they are not scorned and mocked and ridiculed in the arena of public opinion. In fact it is they that do so against the evil Christian oppressors — ask them who is really honestly oppressing them.

Something must be drawing them? Most likely some malevolence spirit :shock: :wink:

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RoyLennigan
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Re: Is It Just Me??

Post by RoyLennigan »

AttentionKMartShoppers wrote:Can someone enlighten me as to why some atheists think appealing to majority opinion a way of determining truth? I never thought I'd see the day...but I have...
Seems to me that this is the way of any conniving provocateur with a plan. Its just human nature. I see atheists do it, I see democrats and republicans doing it. I see christians and muslims doing it. The list goes on.
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Re: Is It Just Me??

Post by charlottecowell »

I think atheists are probably a minority group aren't they? They are also a necessary group, because without the counter arguments they supply we would never have the motivation to strive for the truth, there would be no discourse, just a bunch of people content in their uniform beliefs; this would eventually lead to a state of no-consciousness. If we did not all see things differently we would have no questions left, no desire to evolve, nothing to seek because everything would be known and accepted.

there are also a lot of people who call themselves 'atheists' for lack of a better term, or out of rebellion towards organised religion, which let's face it, is not always 'kosher', if I can make a joke along those lines. What I mean is, in any faith you care to mention, there will be rightful and wrongful practitioners, and I think a lot of atheists appear to struggle intensely - for understandable reasons - with the apparent dichotomy in some areas between what is practised and what is preached.

People also misunderstand what religion is and blame religion for bringing about wars, without fully commprehending that it is politicians who manipulate religion for political ends who cause wars, and it has always been the same throughout history. Just look at the fights that occurred over control of the Delphic oracle, or the conversion of Constantine at a critical moment during battle, Bush & Blair in the Middle East... controversial, perhaps, but food for atheists, definitely. It is right that we don't ignore issues like this, there is a very good reason why we should respect these alternative points of view, becasue without them we would be blind to our own shortcomings.
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Re: Is It Just Me??

Post by B. W. »

charlottecowell wrote:I think atheists are probably a minority group aren't they? They are also a necessary group, because without the counter arguments they supply we would never have the motivation to strive for the truth, there would be no discourse, just a bunch of people content in their uniform beliefs; this would eventually lead to a state of no-consciousness. If we did not all see things differently we would have no questions left, no desire to evolve, nothing to seek because everything would be known and accepted.

there are also a lot of people who call themselves 'atheists' for lack of a better term, or out of rebellion towards organized religion, which let's face it, is not always 'kosher', if I can make a joke along those lines. What I mean is, in any faith you care to mention, there will be rightful and wrongful practitioners, and I think a lot of atheists appear to struggle intensely - for understandable reasons - with the apparent dichotomy in some areas between what is practiced and what is preached.

People also misunderstand what religion is and blame religion for bringing about wars, without fully comprehending that it is politicians who manipulate religion for political ends who cause wars, and it has always been the same throughout history. Just look at the fights that occurred over control of the Delphic oracle, or the conversion of Constantine at a critical moment during battle, Bush & Blair in the Middle East... controversial, perhaps, but food for atheists, definitely. It is right that we don't ignore issues like this, there is a very good reason why we should respect these alternative points of view, because without them we would be blind to our own shortcomings.
True,

Ancient Roman charged the early Christians with the crime of atheism because Christians would not ascribe to the gods of the Pagan world. Christians were put to death and persecuted because they would not bow to the plural diversity gods the ancient world.

So, as I see it, nothing has much changed — Christians are still charged with the crime of atheism towards the diversity gods of this world, including the secular absolute no god— no-religion-fundamentalist crowd.

What are Christians guilty of? Teaching to obey the government, render unto Caesar what belongs to Caesar, live peaceably amongst the crowds? Maybe it is because we live by the codes of not committing adultery, honor our parents, love or spouses, etc and etc? There are always a few high profile Christian bad apples that get caught doing some sin but the vast majority of Christian are not them and do not practice what these do, yet we are all accused of hypocrisy.

I guess Christians are charged with pushing narrow minded moral on the rest of enlighten society that honors committing adultery - broken homes — fractured families, murder — putting to death the unborn- the elderly-infirm, abandonment of parents, honors stealing for legitimate selfish ends, well you get the picture.

Christians narrow minded restrictive morals are a threat to the world and the most heinous crime we commit as Christians — is how dare we judge and say there is only one God and only one way to God through Jesus Christ - that God forgives us through Christ Jesus alone!

Our crime? Loving God with all our being and learning to love each other in the process and for this — Christians are charged as criminals of the worst kind. Times and cultures have changed but not the attacks.
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charlottecowell
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Re: Is It Just Me??

Post by charlottecowell »

Peace, man, I didn't mean to cause offence!

I am a Christian too, don't forget, and maybe some days I feel a bit persecuted as well, who doesn't? I'm well aware of the sacrifices involved and the level of misunderstanding from non-Christians, but I'm not going to feel bitter about that as I know that I have something worth more than anything else, which is knowledge of God's love.

All I am saying is diversity of belief is important because whatever the future holds, we have reached the promised land yet - not fully, not on a global scale, whatever is happening in our hearts - so it's still a question of seeking a way forward.

And it is definitely true that politicians of all religions use 'God' to fulfill their personal ambitions, and even within Christianity there are great differences of opinion, between, say Catholics and Puritans....being humble in one's belief appears to be the only balanced option in such a situation, including tolerance of atheists, though not necessarily satanists!
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Re: Is It Just Me??

Post by B. W. »

charlottecowell wrote:Peace, man, I didn't mean to cause offence!

I am a Christian too, don't forget, and maybe some days I feel a bit persecuted as well, who doesn't? I'm well aware of the sacrifices involved and the level of misunderstanding from non-Christians, but I'm not going to feel bitter about that as I know that I have something worth more than anything else, which is knowledge of God's love.

All I am saying is diversity of belief is important because whatever the future holds, we have reached the promised land yet - not fully, not on a global scale, whatever is happening in our hearts - so it's still a question of seeking a way forward.

And it is definitely true that politicians of all religions use 'God' to fulfill their personal ambitions, and even within Christianity there are great differences of opinion, between, say Catholics and Puritans....being humble in one's belief appears to be the only balanced option in such a situation, including tolerance of atheists, though not necessarily satanists!
No offence taken - thought I was just answering the question and adding to the discussion :wave:

God's Blessings too You y@};-
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Science is man's invention - creation is God's
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Old Polish Proverb:
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Re: Is It Just Me??

Post by Cross.eyed »

charlottecowell wrote:I think atheists are probably a minority group aren't they? They are also a necessary group, because without the counter arguments they supply we would never have the motivation to strive for the truth, there would be no discourse, just a bunch of people content in their uniform beliefs; this would eventually lead to a state of no-consciousness. If we did not all see things differently we would have no questions left, no desire to evolve, nothing to seek because everything would be known and accepted.
Yes the atheists are in a minority-in the U.S.A. it is about 17%.
You are right about their being necessary. Being in contrast they make us think- not just about what they are saying -but also we are at times prompted to reexamine our own stance and usually for the better either directly or indirectly.
there are also a lot of people who call themselves 'atheists' for lack of a better term, or out of rebellion towards organised religion, which let's face it, is not always 'kosher', if I can make a joke along those lines. What I mean is, in any faith you care to mention, there will be rightful and wrongful practitioners, and I think a lot of atheists appear to struggle intensely - for understandable reasons - with the apparent dichotomy in some areas between what is practised and what is preached.
And it seems it will always be this way until absolute proof is at hand. I used to debate atheists on another forum until everything became the same old argument in different words.
Some called themselves agnostic atheists and some chose atheist agnostic atheist and a few other such titles just for kicks and giggles. It is the true agnostic who is actually looking for truth.
People also misunderstand what religion is and blame religion for bringing about wars, without fully commprehending that it is politicians who manipulate religion for political ends who cause wars, and it has always been the same throughout history. Just look at the fights that occurred over control of the Delphic oracle, or the conversion of Constantine at a critical moment during battle, Bush & Blair in the Middle East... controversial, perhaps, but food for atheists, definitely. It is right that we don't ignore issues like this, there is a very good reason why we should respect these alternative points of view, becasue without them we would be blind to our own shortcomings.
Right on. Whether the Crusades or any other dark event it was mostly caused by a few who lead the many for their own agenda.
I am the wretch the song refers to.
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