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Poll: Religion?
Author
Topic: What is your religion (generalities)?
Gadani
U
posted 07-07-2008 11:22:32 AM
I don't really care about specifics, I'm just curious.
Blindy.
Suicide (Also: Gay.)
posted 07-07-2008 11:29:10 AM
Eh. I go to Church because I like the message of trust and faith in humanity. Is there a god? Are there gods? I don't know. I think if there is supreme being(s) they would be well above concern for the worship specifics and would just be happy that people are loving and caring for each other.
Karnaj
Road Warrior Queef
posted 07-07-2008 11:54:00 AM
I had several witty answers all involving some form of sodomy, but truth be told, I have no religion. The supernatural interests me in much the same way a TV show or book would--as a curiosity. I honestly don't feel that warm and happy feeling that religious people do when they talk about affirming their faith, and I certainly don't believe in any sort of god or gods.
That's the American Dream: to make your life into something you can sell. - Chuck Palahniuk, Haunted

Under capitalism, man exploits man. Under communism, it's just the opposite. - John Kenneth Galbraith



Beer.

Gadani
U
posted 07-07-2008 01:20:02 PM
Shit, I forgot atheist.

I'm retarded

Vorbis
Vend-A-Goat
posted 07-07-2008 01:35:39 PM
Roman Catholic, and I don't just like the message. I believe in the numinous, and detest the notion that the physical sciences can provide information outside of their scope. That said, I affirm Justin Martyr's dictum: "If it's true, it's Christian." Especially in the light of Isaiah 45:15.
Willias
Pancake
posted 07-07-2008 02:00:49 PM
quote:
Karnaj had this to say about Matthew Broderick:
I had several witty answers all involving some form of sodomy, but truth be told, I have no religion. The supernatural interests me in much the same way a TV show or book would--as a curiosity. I honestly don't feel that warm and happy feeling that religious people do when they talk about affirming their faith, and I certainly don't believe in any sort of god or gods.

This sums me up pretty well.

Though I don't have any sodomy jokes, so minus that part.

Bloodsage
Heart Attack
posted 07-07-2008 02:25:17 PM
BDFSM-ian.

Spaghetti monsters seem just as useful as anything else as a means of quieting neolithic insecurities while huddling around the campfire as protection against things that move in the night.

To reign is worth ambition, though in Hell:
Better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven.

--Satan, quoted by John Milton

Noxhil
Pancake
posted 07-07-2008 02:33:08 PM
I guess Agnostic. There's really no way for us to know, so it's not very useful to consider it.
Dr. Gee
Say it Loud, Say it Plowed!
posted 07-07-2008 04:35:31 PM
Atheist, although the arguments for His Noodly Magnificense are beginning to sway me.

Dr. Gee fucked around with this message on 07-07-2008 at 04:36 PM.

Maradon!
posted 07-07-2008 06:11:01 PM
I guess that depends on your perspective.

I am a naturalist, as opposed to a supernaturalist, in that I do not believe that anything is beyond the scope of the natural universe. To supernaturalists this makes me an atheist, and because most people default to supernaturalism this is how I usually describe myself.

However, I am not a nihilist. I do place faith in some things. The primacy of humanity by virtue of sentience, for example, and a prevailing order to and objectivity of the universe and human nature. To atheists, this makes me a deist in the order of Albert Einstein and Benjamin Franklin.

Dr. Gee
Say it Loud, Say it Plowed!
posted 07-07-2008 06:51:16 PM
quote:
ACES! Another post by Maradon!:

However, I am not a nihilist. I do place faith in some things. The primacy of humanity by virtue of sentience, for example, and a prevailing order to and objectivity of the universe and human nature. To atheists, this makes me a deist in the order of Albert Einstein and Benjamin Franklin.

That doesn't really sound deist to me! My understanding of deism is that there's a specific entity who created the universe, but doesn't interfere in day-to-day matters and isn't specifically the god of <insert theistic religion>.

None of which you mentioned so I wouldn't apply the label there.

Maradon!
posted 07-07-2008 07:20:32 PM
I'm just relaying the accusations that I get from other atheists! I don't feel it's deism either, because I don't believe in a cognizant supreme entity.

Maradon! fucked around with this message on 07-07-2008 at 07:20 PM.

Kinanik
Upset about being titless
posted 07-07-2008 08:14:18 PM
quote:
From the book of Maradon!, chapter 3, verse 16:

However, I am not a nihilist. I do place faith in some things. The primacy of humanity by virtue of sentience, for example, and a prevailing order to and objectivity of the universe and human nature. To atheists, this makes me a deist in the order of Albert Einstein and Benjamin Franklin.

That can also be called "Randian" (or Objectivist, if you prefer).

Gully Foyle is my name
And Terra is my nation
Deep space is my dwelling place
The stars my destination
Vorbis
Vend-A-Goat
posted 07-07-2008 08:55:30 PM
quote:
Maradon! said this about your mom:
I guess that depends on your perspective.

I am a naturalist, as opposed to a supernaturalist, in that I do not believe that anything is beyond the scope of the natural universe. To supernaturalists this makes me an atheist, and because most people default to supernaturalism this is how I usually describe myself.

However, I am not a nihilist. I do place faith in some things. The primacy of humanity by virtue of sentience, for example, and a prevailing order to and objectivity of the universe and human nature. To atheists, this makes me a deist in the order of Albert Einstein and Benjamin Franklin.


A right proper fellow of the Enlightenment you are! You'd do well with Comte, Condorcet, and Diderot--to mention a few frogs.

Kant and DesCartes would probably be right up your alley.

Maradon!
posted 07-07-2008 09:31:23 PM
Actually I based this all off that one scene in Ghostbusters 1 where Winston and Ray are in ecto 1 and Winston asks Ray if he believes in God and Ray responds "I never met him."

But Ayn Rand and Immanuel Kant are also awesome to be certain

Karnaj
Road Warrior Queef
posted 07-07-2008 09:38:40 PM
quote:
The propaganda machine of Vorbis's junta released this statement:
A right proper fellow of the Enlightenment you are! You'd do well with Comte, Condorcet, and Diderot--to mention a few frogs.

Kant and DesCartes would probably be right up your alley.


Fuck you and your fucking name-dropping. When I was your age, I was shredding the arguments of creationists and Christians before my 1 PM breakfast! Get more substantive, else I'll drop some motherfuckin' science on you one time.

That's the American Dream: to make your life into something you can sell. - Chuck Palahniuk, Haunted

Under capitalism, man exploits man. Under communism, it's just the opposite. - John Kenneth Galbraith



Beer.

Vorbis
Vend-A-Goat
posted 07-08-2008 12:56:26 AM
quote:
Karnaj's account was hax0red to write:
Fuck you and your fucking name-dropping. When I was your age, I was shredding the arguments of creationists and Christians before my 1 PM breakfast! Get more substantive, else I'll drop some motherfuckin' science on you one time.

Go ahead and drop some science on me. I'm content with my mostly-ontic understanding of the world. I've got enough of an ontological understanding to not worry that the sun won't rise in the morning, or be surprised by simple natural phenomena. That's all the more a literature major needs.

And it's not like it's hard to shred the arguments of creationists--they're unpopular and fundamentally flawed both scientifically and theologically. Though, you did manage to execute your refutations with eloquence unbefitting a cock-rammed mouth.

OH SHIT.

[ edit: I just realized I've actually read a decent bit of each thinker I dropped in this thread. Go go liberal arts! ]

Vorbis fucked around with this message on 07-08-2008 at 12:58 AM.

Mr. Parcelan
posted 07-08-2008 01:19:22 AM
I should ban everyone who isn't Catholic.

Then sodomize them.

It's okay to do it if you do it in the name of holy vengeance.

Xian
Pancake
posted 07-08-2008 01:56:58 AM
I consider myself pagan generally. I believe in more than one god, but I also think that all those gods are really possibly just one divine source. So I believe in multiple gods but only one god, I guess. Like a screwdriver, fork, knife, etc can also be a swiss army knife.
Densetsu
NOT DRYSART
posted 07-08-2008 01:58:52 AM
Pagan is not a religion.
I was in the Virgin Islands once. I met a girl, we ate lobster, drank piña coladas. At sunset, we made love like sea otters. That was a pretty good day. Why couldn't I get that day over, and over?
Xian
Pancake
posted 07-08-2008 02:06:42 AM
Yeah I know in it itself is not a religion, I meant that my beliefs are generally considered pagan. I guess I could have simplified.
Ares
posted 07-08-2008 10:59:16 AM
I was born and welcomed into the United Church, but I don't really have a religion. I consider myself more of a spiritualist than anything else.
Captain Tarquinn
Don't Ask
posted 07-08-2008 12:13:56 PM
This thread makes me want to worship Khorne.
"A fanatic is one who can't change his mind and won't change the subject."
Vorbis
Vend-A-Goat
posted 07-08-2008 12:54:44 PM
Actually, I think this just made me reconsider my religious views.
Karnaj
Road Warrior Queef
posted 07-08-2008 01:43:33 PM
quote:
Captain Tarquinn put down Tada! magazine long enough to type:
This thread makes me want to worship Khorne.

I worship corn.

Well, actually, I worship its avatar, Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey, which by law must be made from at least 51% corn.

That's the American Dream: to make your life into something you can sell. - Chuck Palahniuk, Haunted

Under capitalism, man exploits man. Under communism, it's just the opposite. - John Kenneth Galbraith



Beer.

Steven Steve
posted 07-08-2008 01:49:44 PM
Nihilism/solipsism
"Absolutely NOTHING [will stop me from buying Diablo III]. I will buy it regardless of what they do."
- Grawbad, Battle.net forums

"Don't want to sound like a fanboy, but I am with you. I'll buy it for sure, it's just a matter of for how long I will be playing it..."
- Silvast, Battle.net forums

Steven Steve
posted 07-08-2008 01:50:58 PM
Whenever I hear "pagan" I think three things: Pagans from Thief, the humans that call you a pagan in Everquest, and fat ginger DnD people.
"Absolutely NOTHING [will stop me from buying Diablo III]. I will buy it regardless of what they do."
- Grawbad, Battle.net forums

"Don't want to sound like a fanboy, but I am with you. I'll buy it for sure, it's just a matter of for how long I will be playing it..."
- Silvast, Battle.net forums

Captain Tarquinn
Don't Ask
posted 07-08-2008 01:51:41 PM
quote:
Karnaj's fortune cookie read:
I worship corn.

Well, actually, I worship its avatar, Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey, which by law must be made from at least 51% corn.


Sorry, I just realized that I made a typo in my last post.

Captain Tarquinn fucked around with this message on 07-08-2008 at 01:52 PM.

"A fanatic is one who can't change his mind and won't change the subject."
Norim the Stumpy
Pancake
posted 07-08-2008 02:22:01 PM
Baptist... it's not so much about trying to prove creationism, as it is about believing in something.

Just because you haven't seen a million dollars, doesn't mean it doesn't exist.

Captain Tarquinn
Don't Ask
posted 07-08-2008 02:28:30 PM
quote:
Norim the Stumpy probably says this to all the girls:

Just because you haven't seen a million dollars, doesn't mean it doesn't exist.


You might want to edit that out.

Whoops, too late, I quoted it.

"A fanatic is one who can't change his mind and won't change the subject."
nem-x
posted 07-08-2008 02:38:03 PM
Taeldian
Pancake
posted 07-08-2008 02:48:16 PM
quote:
Just because you haven't seen a million dollars, doesn't mean it doesn't exist.

You are going to Hell for this comment.

Taeldian fucked around with this message on 07-08-2008 at 02:48 PM.

Vorbis
Vend-A-Goat
posted 07-08-2008 03:08:54 PM
It's really not that stupid of a comment. It's just a simple statement of a rather obvious tidbit that Bloodsage loves reminding people of--something cannot be proved in the negative, and thus the burden of proof falls on the affirmative.

Now, of course, that goes right back around and hits him with his responsibility to prove God's existence. That's why people are getting ready to pounce. But, after all, he's not asserting that proof exists. Nor that it should exist. The metaphysical world, as I've said earlier, isn't contained by the physical world, nor could it be studied by the same sciences that study the physical world. Where it interacts, that's where things get murky--that's why neurosciences are so interesting. Thoughts, emotions, &c., are all real, but they're not actual. But they are expressed by people, and so they, in some fashion, descend into the physical world through a physical mechanism.

But, we can't conduct rigorous, methodical experiments on anything metaphysical, since it's not actual, and so it is said not to exist. At least, that's been the case since Hobbes brought materialist thought into vogue.

Azakias
Never wore the pants, thus still wields the power of unused (_|_)
posted 07-08-2008 05:28:11 PM
quote:
Dr. Gee's account was hax0red to write:
Atheist, although the arguments for His Noodly Magnificense are beginning to sway me.

Bingo.

I'm more of a mind like this: Religion doesnt have a part in my normal, everyday existance in any way, really, so I have no real opinion of it myself. I enjoy learning about religion the same way that I enjoy watching HGTV. Sometimes its interesting, sometimes I just want to turn off the TV.

"Age by age have men stood up and said to the world, 'From what has come before me, I was forged, but I am new and greater than my forebears.' And so each man walks the world in ruin, abandoned and untried. Less than the whole of his being"
Maradon!
posted 07-08-2008 06:22:52 PM
quote:
Vorbising:
The metaphysical world, as I've said earlier, isn't contained by the physical world, nor could it be studied by the same sciences that study the physical world. Where it interacts, that's where things get murky--that's why neurosciences are so interesting. Thoughts, emotions, &c., are all real, but they're not actual. But they are expressed by people, and so they, in some fashion, descend into the physical world through a physical mechanism.

What I don't understand about this portrayal is that if the supernatural isn't contained by the physical world, how can you make the claim that the supernatural affects the physical world at all?

If the supernatural affects the physical universe, then it's effects would most certainly be quantifiable.

Vorbis
Vend-A-Goat
posted 07-08-2008 06:59:22 PM
quote:
There was much rejoicing when Maradon! said this:
What I don't understand about this portrayal is that if the supernatural isn't contained by the physical world, how can you make the claim that the supernatural affects the physical world at all?

If the supernatural affects the physical universe, then it's effects would most certainly be quantifiable.


This is the murky area, as I said. To portray the physical and metaphysical as mutually exclusive would be incorrect, but does allow for the conclusion that we haven't a damned reason to care about anything metaphysical. Rather, they're mostly exclusive; there is some overlap. Things like free will, identity, morality, &c., are not what you would call physical things. Yet they are known innately and naturally (that is, they're not entirely social constructions--their trappings, which are legion, are certainly conventional, but they exist as universals), and thus must in some fashion exist physically.

Take religion for example. Mankind is, as man, inclined to believe in some form of a metaphysical world. Even in Enlightenment countries where professed atheism and general spiritual apathy have become the epistemological norm, the youth show more religious affiliation than their parents. Physically, this innate "spiritual inclination" of man can be explained genetically. But it also is a, to be hatefully obtuse, shadowy hint of the penumbra emanating from man's metaphysical existence.

Of course, that conclusion can be entirely discounted by materialist methodology and ruled as an extraneous theory that gets us nowhere when it comes to understanding our world. And rightfully so--it takes an amount of faith to not reduce man and the world to solely their physical natures.

The argument that I find best suited to show, from tangible evidence, the reality and importance of our metaphysical dimension belongs to Professor Voegelin: The strength of a philosophy can be seen by its fruits when applied to politics--The Enlightenment's views of man resulted in the bloodshed of the French Revolution, which sparked the entire series of Marxist revolts, and thus contributed to most every major conflict in the 20th century.

To recover from my tangent: The physical traces of the metaphysical are, to be redundant, physical and in that fashion quantifiable. That those traces are merely physical is both a popular and an understandable perception. It's like trying to identify the source of a draft in a dark room--you can find the chink in the wall that's allowing for the room to develop an air current, but you can only speculate as to the atmospheric conditions outside and their causes.

Vorbis
Vend-A-Goat
posted 07-08-2008 07:12:16 PM
And to clarify: I must make it quite obvious that the above arguments are not intended to convince anyone that the metaphysical exists, but rather to refute the argument that because it cannot be proven to exist physically, it cannot exist at all.
Maradon!
posted 07-08-2008 07:25:41 PM
There's actually a great deal that you can tell from that draft, though, particularly if the draft were caused by the atmospheric conditions outside.

If we could find any phenomena for which the metaphysical were the most likely explanation (which we have yet to do, but is made plausible under this portrayal), we could certainly infer a lot about the "effector" from them. In other words, scientifically analyzing the metaphysical.

It doesn't make sense for the metaphysical to be able to physically effect the physical without itself being subject to the same analysis by which we'd study any other physical phenomenon.

As a side note, I also take great umbrage at the arbitrary assignment of atrocities committed by atheists to atheism.

Vorbis
Vend-A-Goat
posted 07-08-2008 07:46:03 PM
quote:
Maradon! had this to say about dark elf butts:
There's actually a great deal that you can tell from that draft, though, particularly if the draft were caused by the atmospheric conditions outside.

If we could find any phenomena for which the metaphysical were the most likely explanation (which we have yet to do, but is made plausible under this portrayal), we could certainly infer a lot about the "effector" from them. In other words, scientifically analyzing the metaphysical.

It doesn't make sense for the metaphysical to be able to physically effect the physical without itself being subject to the same analysis by which we'd study any other physical phenomenon.

As a side note, I also take great umbrage at the arbitrary assignment of atrocities committed by atheists to atheism.



Shit, I don't understand the way in which they interact, and my portrayal is a rather rough sketch of to what extent I do understand it. But what I can say in good faith is that by some mechanism--whether it be draft-like, in which case your conclusion is quite correct, or if it be some sort of parallelism akin to Strange Action at a Distance, or some other option--the metaphysical and physical worlds interact enough that it is reasonable to discuss the metaphysical from physical evidence, and yet also reasonable to assume its non-existence in some form of naturalistic determination.

And, as a response to your side note, your umbrage, I'm afraid, is taken early and incorrectly. Atrocities are committed by individuals--atheism isn't the cause, much like Catholicism wasn't the cause of Catholic corruption. However, atheism is a symptom--a rather benign one--of the materialist reduction. It's because the Marquis de Sade was a fucked up person that he day-dreamed about cannibalistic slaughter orgies all day. His atheism was just a side note. Robespierre was violently compassionate, but it wasn't because of his religious devotion to human dignity.

I didn't mean to be unclear about that, I just didn't feel like writing a Dethessay complete with footnotes and appendices of minutiae.

Maradon!
posted 07-08-2008 08:20:19 PM
quote:
The strength of a philosophy can be seen by its fruits when applied to politics--The Enlightenment's views of man resulted in the bloodshed of the French Revolution, which sparked the entire series of Marxist revolts, and thus contributed to most every major conflict in the 20th century.

Maybe I read that wrong but it certainly sounds to me like it's blaming atheists for every major conflict in the 20th century.

Other than that we're in agreement in not knowing how all that other stuff works!

All times are US/Eastern
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