601. Neuroscience and Moral Politics: Chomsky's Intellectual Progeny
Comment #87101 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 8:07 am
I didn't say that. I said condemnation should be proportional to the crime. It's not a dichotomous world - all can be condemned. One party doesn't have to be condemned at the exclusion of the other.
Hyperpatriotic yanks would be one subgroup of reflexive Chomsky critics, but certainly not the only group (see post #120 above for a list of others).
602. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #87100 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 8:06 am
Can you be more specific?
603. The Transcendental Argument for God
Comment #87099 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 8:04 am
So, if I understand you correctly, you believe that mathematical objects (such as numbers) exist objectively, but without any substance (either physical or supernatural). So, I wonder, where exactly in the universe are these objects?
Further, some mathematical objects are very complex, and according to Dawkins in TGD it's not good enough to say "they just are"; rather one must give a simple explanation for them.
So how were they formed? Where to they come from?
604. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #87086 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 6:49 am
I am surprised that the people in this forum seem more interested in picking hole in my puny arguments than in asserting their own view of truth.
Tell me, what does atheim have to offer the world, and what evidence of atheistic societies can you provide?
605. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #87078 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 6:36 am
well, that is an excellent question. Who do you think is to say which is right?
606. Neuroscience and Moral Politics: Chomsky's Intellectual Progeny
Comment #87076 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 6:32 am
So I ask you which is the greater offense? How do you reconcile spending so many posts attacking Livingstone's "honoured friend" phrase while ignoring abuses against homosexuals on a vastly more serious scale, all supported by right wing governments?
The gay community were fine with Livingstone about it - they didn't feel he was out of line. You're taking it a lot more seriously.
607. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #87067 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 6:14 am
You are right to be confused. But getting to know God is more than simply finding the right set of legalistic rules with which to bolster our own vain opinions or to further our own selfish ends.
608. Neuroscience and Moral Politics: Chomsky's Intellectual Progeny
Comment #87065 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 6:10 am
Can you elaborate? Are you talking gays?
If so, this has already been addressed above: Livingstone didn't ignore their views, (in fact they support him and he them)
and the cleric isn't in any position powerful enough to threaten their rights in London.
609. Neuroscience and Moral Politics: Chomsky's Intellectual Progeny
Comment #87057 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 5:49 am
As regards to the conference: it's a question of tactics. Do you help or hinder community relations if all groups are represented in discussion, or if one or more than you disagree with are excluded.
but given the fact the right are actually in power,
610. Neuroscience and Moral Politics: Chomsky's Intellectual Progeny
Comment #87054 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 5:37 am
What to you mean by clean up? Only when the left is 100% perfect, then it is to be taken seriously? Is the left monolithic anyway? Is it even humanly possible for any political movement to attain these standards?
One left-wing city mayor sending a limo over for al-Qaradawi (while ignoring his homophobia) is ORDERS OF MAGNITUDE different from the Queen, PM and US President sucking up to, giving diplomatic support to, and arming, the House of Saud, with all its many human rights abuses.
Yes, one does win moral arguments in this fashion - as it is consequences that count, not abstractions about being perfect before you can act.
611. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #87048 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 5:23 am
You are quite right to denounce any Christians or People who purport to be Christians who use the Bible to justify slavery. I think that this is where to confusion lies for Atheists. Being a Christian who follows what God requires of him i.e. "to act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God" (Micah 6 v8) is not the same at all as someone who claims to be a Christian and uses the power of the church institution and quotes from the Bible to justify his own selfish ends.
612. Neuroscience and Moral Politics: Chomsky's Intellectual Progeny
Comment #87046 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 5:12 am
Steve99, who want to take the moral high ground and constantly accuse others, such as Galloway or Livinstone or Chomsky, of being hypocrites are quick to ignore the flagrant hypocrisy which exists in bucket loads at the other end of the political spectrum.
613. Neuroscience and Moral Politics: Chomsky's Intellectual Progeny
Comment #87031 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 3:44 am
Your accusation doesn't work because Yusuf al-Qaradawi's antigay stance isn't supported by Livingstone.
It seems entry into the "vile club" is exceedingly easy.
614. Can we at least demand 'Secular Communion'?
Comment #87029 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 3:28 am
To restate my opinion on the original thread where the cartoon is posted, I do not believe that Dawkins is being presented as a gay stereotype, rather his characteristic exhuberance and sense of wonder are being exaggerated.
The overt gay community has for a long time courted controversy and indulged in shameless self-parody.
A bit of mocking him can be taken tongue in cheek and does not affect his credibility in the slightest.
In short, to my jaded, bourgeois eyes at least, the gay community and its various tropes are pretty much mainstream cultural property in Britain these days and thus need no special treatment.
615. The Transcendental Argument for God
Comment #87028 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 3:16 am
I am not sure what your prediction actually predicts
The answer is: The movement of the planets as observed in our conscious experience is directly caused by God.
How does God manage to push our conscious experience in this way? The answer is: Roughly in the same way that physical gravity manages to push physical planets around :-)
616. Neuroscience and Moral Politics: Chomsky's Intellectual Progeny
Comment #87022 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 2:52 am
Keith states that Ken Livingstone, probably London's best mayor ever, is "vile". The evidence for such an assertion?
617. The Transcendental Argument for God
Comment #87020 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 2:38 am
A worldview that posits that fundamentally reality is physical has to explain how a physical system produces consciousness; but obviously a worldview that posits that fundamentally reality is conscious does not have this particular problem. I am not sure why you have trouble understanding this, and I don't know how better to explain it.
I, being an idealistic theist, can agree with every single sentence written in a scientific or technological book,
Prove then the objective existence of the moon. Or of the Statue of Liberty if you prefer.
618. The Transcendental Argument for God
Comment #87016 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 2:18 am
I offered idealistic theism as a much more successful ontological theory than scientific naturalism.
If one accepts that objective reality is intrinsically ethical
Even more I think one adopts a theistic worldview, because the concept of ethics makes no sense at the absence of conscious subject
619. Can we at least demand 'Secular Communion'?
Comment #87015 by steve99 on November 11, 2007 at 2:12 am
It's not a particularly offensive cartoon.
620. When Congress Interferes With Science, Who You Gonna Call? (Hint: It's not Ghostbusters)
Comment #86960 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 2:57 pm
Have STD's increased or decreased since the widespread usage of condoms within the past decade?
Among teens and college students, condoms foster the idea that kids are safe when they use them.
Therefore, they have more sex.
However, condoms are not effective in a good percentage of cases.
Therefore, although the act may have become somewhat safer, you have a disproportionally higher rate of sexual activity that negates the protection of a condom.
So in reality, condoms have simply made the problem worse as they project the illusion that people are safe as long as they use them.
621. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86948 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 1:56 pm
Your post about an all-powerful God being able to do what is logically contradictory was frankly inane. Can he make a square triangle?
622. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86930 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 1:01 pm
Steeve, the ability to "pervert" is called free-will. You wouldn't have preferred not to have that would you?
623. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86925 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 12:53 pm
These guys don't seem to realise how much of their conception of duty and decency actually derives from the judeo-christian heritage within which they were brought up!
When it occurred, everything got skewed. Every good thing became susceptible to distortion and perversion: justice, love, beauty, poower. Everything that we can think of as evil is a perversion of something good.
624. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86915 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 12:36 pm
He is the self-suffient cause, and source of all logic.
He is the source of all justice and love and beauty, because He IS Justice, Love and Beauty (among many other attrubutes.
625. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86909 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 12:22 pm
You've fallen into his trap! You seem to be forgetting that christians believe that God is the "first cause", the origin of the Universe. In their view, he literally designed all of the laws of nature, including Pi, the Primes, and logic itself.
But it HAS NOT been shown to be true. Far from it!
626. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86901 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 11:56 am
If God created the Universe, as ADH has claimed, then he also created logic.
627. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86892 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 11:32 am
Are you sure it is the Truth that you are facing.
That is precisely my point. You may in fact be withdrawing FROM the Truth into a kind of self-constructed refuge
where you rely heavily on the texts and "insights" of your Mentors and Prophets - the High Priests of atheism.
I have argued and will continue to insist that Atheism is a surrogate religion: "Happy band of Brothers", convert's , epiphanies, testimonies, boot camps for children ... etc. You must at least amit that with "trappings" like these you stand open to the charge of becoming a surrogate religion.
628. When Congress Interferes With Science, Who You Gonna Call? (Hint: It's not Ghostbusters)
Comment #86886 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 11:19 am
What I think is irrelevant. The fact is that there are concequences for our actions, and when we try to mask or aviod them, our perceived solutions become problems in themselves.
629. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86877 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 11:09 am
I don't for one moment take that image literally, and I don't know of anyone who does. It is used to convey some idea of the spendour of the new creation.
630. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86875 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 11:03 am
Dvespertilio, could precisely these words not apply to the atheist "fraternity"?
The wind of Truth can be chilly - you have to draw close together for warmth, fellowship and mutual support.
631. The Transcendental Argument for God
Comment #86857 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 10:30 am
The greater the scientist today the more overspecialized they are, and therefore the more naive their understanding of the broader issues of philosophy is.
632. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86845 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 9:41 am
Steve, for your sake I hope the easy chair debates don't turn ugly near you anytime soon. ADH really is a wolf in sheep's clothing.
633. When Congress Interferes With Science, Who You Gonna Call? (Hint: It's not Ghostbusters)
Comment #86839 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 9:28 am
We are told in our science classes that we are animals, not just in the biological context, but in every other context. And then in school, students get free condoms. In nearly every article I've read in support of free contraceptives for students, one of the main arguments is "kids are going to have sex anyways". So what do you think all that implies?
634. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86824 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 8:34 am
I told you I was out of my depth.
635. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86813 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 7:53 am
Your warm hearted treatment, along with some others, suggests that you imagine this is all just some sort of silly parlor game with no real consequences out in the real world. Please do enlighten me as to the nature of your "delight." I am sincerely interested.
636. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86803 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 7:20 am
My subjective feelings are not of the "I've seen a flying teapot" variety or "I've just had an encounter with a pink unicorn". It is an experience that is shared by millions of people, each in his or her unique way (because God is a Person and reveals "Him"self to us personally) and is warranted by the coherent historical narrative that Scripture constitutes.
I believe that science is very far from showing that God does not exist.
637. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86792 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 6:48 am
So what I am saying is that we should not preculde, a priori, evidence which is not of a scientific nature - the kind of character-based evidence I mentioned before, and also the extent to which the belief in question is warranted by history and by the experience of others.
638. The Transcendental Argument for God
Comment #86776 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 6:15 am
Or, to mention another example, the stronger version of scientific naturalism would render even mathematical propositions meaningless, and the weaker version would place mathematical objects and laws in the realm of the non-objective opposing the deepest intuitions of the mathematicians.
But if the phenomenal world that science studies is entirely different from objective reality then scientific naturalism is false.
639. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86773 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 6:06 am
What I said, and the examples I gave bear out my point, was that we CANNOT RULE OUT an external cause a priori.
640. D'Souza - Nothing to Refute Here
Comment #86738 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 3:33 am
Nice article - well done.
641. The Transcendental Argument for God
Comment #86731 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 3:17 am
And I would love to see any experimental predictions of scientific naturalism. Tell you what: For each experimental prediction of scientific naturalism you give me, I'll give you one experimental prediction of idealistic theism :-)
642. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86724 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 3:00 am
Steve, re Ockham's razor. I'm afraid it cuts nothing here. Dr B's explanation was not an explanation of the origin of the said feeling but of the cerebral mechanics, what can be observed in the brain when a certain feeling or experience is induced. It says nothing about what inuced the experience in the first place.
643. The Transcendental Argument for God
Comment #86720 by steve99 on November 10, 2007 at 2:55 am
But for those who believe in scientific naturalism exactly the opposite has happened: the more we learn about phenomenal reality the less unequivocal and the more shaky their understanding of objective reality has become. Indeed, as we saw, the number and size of holes is increasing.
do you expect scientific naturalism to keep producing less and less unequivocal maps of objective reality?
What we are discussing is scientific naturalism's growing pains for accounting for the phenomenal reality that science is so well mapping. Which, incidentally, is not even the primary problem of scientific naturalism; its primary problem is the transcendental argument we have been discussing in this thread.
Oh I see: The more holes and paradoxes the better, eh?
I hope you are joking. I find the trick of pushing the burden the proof around to be shameful, because reason requires one justify all claims no matter their form (and I approvingly notice that Dawkins in his TGD at least did not shy away from trying to justify his belief in the non-existence of a creator God). But let me play this childish game and change my claim into: "No subjective ethical concepts exist". That's a negative existential claim and I don't need to justify it, correct? And if you disagree with it and claim that subjective ethical concepts exist it's you who have the "burden of proof".
644. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86579 by steve99 on November 9, 2007 at 4:34 pm
Lovely to put a face to the name :)
645. Church row evolves over fossil boy
Comment #86540 by steve99 on November 9, 2007 at 1:45 pm
I think there is a really serious problem here, which is that the extremist and fundamentalist views of African bishops are fuelling racist views in Europe. This has to stop.
646. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86533 by steve99 on November 9, 2007 at 1:30 pm
mejdrich: thanks for the advice!
Older and wiser men and women with much more impressive credentials than I have have seen no incompatability, so why should I?
647. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86517 by steve99 on November 9, 2007 at 12:51 pm
I think it will make you protest in that adorable Hugh Grant way of yours, but I must say you are as beautiful on the outside as you are on the inside.
Steve, you've been reading CS Lewis's "Till we have Faces"!!
648. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86512 by steve99 on November 9, 2007 at 12:48 pm
For some reason I thought you are more tanned, with dark hair, a thinner face, wear glasses and clean shaven. hehe.
649. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86509 by steve99 on November 9, 2007 at 12:41 pm
Steve99, the "evolution" of your avatar over the past little while has been quite clever. Is that you, actually?
Oh God, a face emerges in steve's avatar and it is so different from what I imagine..
650. Richard Dawkins at AAI 07
Comment #86507 by steve99 on November 9, 2007 at 12:37 pm
But I appreciate how civilised your questions have been. I've enjoyed the discussion.