Re: Faith aint dying soon

On average more people goto a Church, Temple, Cathedral, Synogue in one weekend than all the people going to sports games for an entire year.

Faith is here, and all the Justinian's, Athiest's, and Satanists in the world will not change that.

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: Faith aint dying soon

Sigh....

*puts his troll pants on*

Please show the statistics to back your posting up.

The Belief that one's Own View of reality is the only Reality of the most dangerous of all delusions.

I'll be back and next time ill bring a stronger hamster.

I'm so desensitized, it's gotta be just completely bananas to get me off. - Carl Brutananadilewski

Re: Faith aint dying soon

http://www.sermoncentral.com/illustrations/sermon-illustration-d-greg-ebie-statistics-11803.asp

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: Faith aint dying soon

Personally I have no problems with religion. As long as people choose it themselves and are not forced into a religion. Most people are brainwashed with religion from birth and never thought about it themselves, that is something I do have problems with.

NEE NAW NEE NAW

Primo

Re: Faith aint dying soon

Ummm no. Faith is ending. The percentage of Americans who consider themselves non-religious are increasing, and the religious people in the U.S are concentrated in older demographics.

Religion is dying. Get over it. Good riddance.

Re: Faith aint dying soon

boy, thats a crap source indeed

<@Nolio> Ilu was the man back in the day,he even made monkeywrench and arganon look good for half a round =p
<@iluvatar> it is my grandest achievement
<@Nolio> *half a round  =p
<@iluvatar> still
* Final_Doom is now known as Thanks_Iluvatar

Re: Faith aint dying soon

Faith will never die because a critical mass of atheists always start massacres and then overreach themselves and are done away with.

Saw it in France.
And in Russia.

The core joke of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is that of course no civilization would develop personal computers with instant remote database recovery, and then waste this technology to find good drinks.
Steve Jobs has ruined this joke.

Re: Faith aint dying soon

Not going into when political ideologies become religion, but I don't think you need religion or atheism for massacres Yell.

Re: Faith aint dying soon

atheist societies make human laws sacred

or like Chesterton put it, "A man who believes in nothing, will believe anything"

The core joke of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is that of course no civilization would develop personal computers with instant remote database recovery, and then waste this technology to find good drinks.
Steve Jobs has ruined this joke.

Re: Faith aint dying soon

A wise man might perhaps believe in the sound ability of reason and logic as opposed to filling the void with dictates from outside sources. Human law or divine, neither are important to a man who does what he belives is right. Others judge, thats all there is in my opinion for whatever that's worth. When you let others decide in a prima facie way what your morals or laws should be your probably not going to obey them when all is said and done.

Brotherhood

Re: Faith aint dying soon

Yell,

Stalin, sure. But he is better described as a communist, and you don't have to be an atheist to be a communist. Ideological zealots are scary no matter what their religious affiliation.

And France? WTF?

Re: Faith aint dying soon

All communists are atheists--they raise government to the position of god, giving it absolute authority over all aspects of men's lives. Every communist in Amerika who identifies themself as religious (there are many) is not religions, he's a fool.

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

Re: Faith aint dying soon

Kemp,

Well yeah. But not all atheists are communists, so the association is dumb.

14 (edited by Justinian I 26-Dec-2012 05:51:30)

Re: Faith aint dying soon

Baratheon,

Actually, Yell connected Communist Russia with Atheism. I replied to Yell's silly connection, and Kemp replied to me.

15 (edited by Pixies 26-Dec-2012 06:41:31)

Re: Faith aint dying soon

Religion/pseudo-science isn't going anywhere. Sure, we can hope the future will bring a more scientifically literate public, a public composed of rational and critical thinkers, but that won't rid us of it entirely. The more technologically advanced we become, the less thinking required person-by-person. We are becoming stupider, individually. Brain size increased rapidly in our ancestors over the last few million years, but has reduced on average by 200cc over the last 15-20k years. With the invention of civilisation, we no longer need to be intelligent to survive. Will our science ever have all of the questions, to completely eradicate any form of unknown that religion/pseudo-science can hide in? I don't think so. Faith (belief in something without evidence), will remain. We've evolved with the will to live. To be told there's a possibility of continuing to survive after death, taps into that biological 'need' we have. As long as there is an unknown, there is hope. As long as there is hope, Charlatans will keep that shit alive no matter how logical it's audience. Of the absolute top-end scientists in the US, 10% are admittedly devotely religious, as apposed to the 80-90% in the general public. I think that 10% ain't going anywhere any time soon tongue. I just hope the numbers/weight religion has around the world drops quickly. We're the first species that's developed the ability to completely wipe itself out, on this planet. I'm not a fan of faith-based ideas directing any part of where civilisation is going.

Pixies My pokemon brings all the nerds to the yard, and they're like you wanna trade cards?

16 (edited by V. Kemp 26-Dec-2012 13:05:34)

Re: Faith aint dying soon

Justinian I,

I made no such claim. Your lack of discrimination between necessary and sufficient is dumb!



Baratheon,

Communism is growing in the United States. The growth of this population is evidence of a rise in faithlessness, which is directly in response to the formative post. If you have trouble with a topic, please refrain from commenting on my posts. It's rude to cause me to respond to such drivel. Thanks.

I was responding to the OP, not Justinian I. I was just remarking that there's a huge population of faithless in Amerika, whether they or those of faith are growing quicker. I additionally pointed out that not all of those claim a religious affiliation actually have an ounce of faith in their claimed religion. Many churches have seen falling attendance for decades. Many people who show up on Christmas and Easter have absolutely no regard for their religion beyond these 2 hours a year.

Einstein cites ridiculous figures. First, he compares church worship (base opportunity, utilized by many, of 52/yr for weekly attendance+a few holidays) to sports attendance. This ignores all kinds of obvious facts. Even combining all sports, I doubt anyone would ever want to attend 52 games a year, and even less would even have the opportunity. Many people much prefer watching sporting events in their own homes rather than having the hassle of driving, parking, weather, and prices to attend games. And the statistics cited in his link are from 18 years ago. Making claims about "soon" based on statistics from 18 years ago is humorous, but certainly not insightful.



Pixies,

I think you're mostly right. While I like the Bible as more metaphorical philosophy, I think most people take religions as hokum or relatively literally true. I think most people either believe in a dude literally walking on water or they don't (Christian reference); there's not much room for appreciating figurative "eternal life" by loving and having a positive impact on the world around a person which persists long after one's own death.





Faith already has virtually no power on earth (relatively speaking), beyond the money these corporations bring in. I find the alarmism of secularists quite alarming, since religious nuts offer us little to be afraid of. I don't see "faith" in moral philosophies (many of you surely consider all moral philosophies matters of "faith") as problematic to society any more than cultures and values are signs of ignorance and unsophisticated culture. I'm not suggesting that the philosophy I describe here accounts for many of the "faithful," but I do find generalized condemnations of religion as ignorant and idiotic to be short-sighted. Many great thinkers have weighed in on moral philosophy. Generalized attacks on "faith" of any time is presumably an insult to their musings on morality.

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

17 (edited by Little Paul 26-Dec-2012 12:52:45)

Re: Faith aint dying soon

"atheist societies make human laws sacred"
I don't. No sharia for me.

"or like Chesterton put it, "A man who believes in nothing, will believe anything""
If you are easily influenced by any religious or not is determined by your DNA and environment. Hence someone born in india being hindu has a biger chance to believe in something Christian if he was adopted by US parents from childhood instead.

This is proly one of the reasons why US is so religious still. If a normal person would be threatened by death he would make it seem like he abandons his own religion. But a zealot won't and make for the new world. That DNA is still present today.

Re: Faith aint dying soon

In your judgement, a normal person abandons their faith/philosophy when faced with death? Fascinating.

In your judgement, Sharia is the first example that comes to mind when you think of Atheist law? Fascinating.

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

Re: Faith aint dying soon

In Citation: National & International Religion Report, 5/2/94. "To Verify," Leadership.)


Seems he cited his work

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: Faith aint dying soon

> Einstein wrote:

> In Citation: National & International Religion Report, 5/2/94. "To Verify," Leadership.)


Seems he cited his work <

Is that the source from the link you posted? 'cause using a 18 year old study doesn't seem like good academia to me, especially for sociological issues.

This is a little more up to date: http://www.pewforum.org/Unaffiliated/nones-on-the-rise.aspx

21 (edited by Little Paul 26-Dec-2012 18:28:57)

Re: Faith aint dying soon

"In your judgement, a normal person abandons their faith/philosophy when faced with death? Fascinating."
No, but most people will make it appear so unless your resistance really matters. I said nothing about philosophy. If it matters so much you aren't even willing to pretend, you are probably more religious. Not judging, just stating the obvious.

"In your judgement, Sharia is the first example that comes to mind when you think of Atheist law? Fascinating."
It was ment ironic. As in: "this is an example of a religious law system..." "...the generalization isn't correct cause many atheists do not glorify a law system." It was typed for yell and (I presume) +90% of this forum who would actually understand the irony.

Re: Faith aint dying soon

Einstein,

It's still a horribly flawed measure for the other reasons I pointed out. Nice job completely ignoring this. Understandable, because the flaws are so huge and obvious. What's not understandable is why you post this nonsense and stand behind it when you obviously know it's garbage, so much so you don't even try to defend it.




Little Paul,

"I said nothing about philosophy."

A lot of moral philosophy cannot be empirically or logically based, so it's a matter of faith. A lot of faith is moral philosophy. In the context I was speaking, you said a lot about philosophy.

Thanks for stating the obvious, that many "believers" don't really put much stock in their belief. So what? The point's been made. Without any statistics we cannot show how prevalent this phenomenon is (I don't disagree it's common). Rambling about DNA is similarly pointless. DNA doesn't make anyone cling to religion or science as if it obliterates all forms of faith and/or moral philosophy.

"It was ment ironic. As in: "this is an example of a religious law system..." "...the generalization isn't correct cause many atheists do not glorify a law system.""

Yet it was no example of atheists not raising law to the highest authority imaginable. You failed to comprehend or respond to his point that atheists raise law to the highest moral authority void of any moral philosophy or other code of conduct. How clever of you to point out that atheists reject Sharia, as just about every other sane person does. This, however, makes no point in regard to the argument that atheism inherently raises law to a higher authority than it is viewed by many of faith.

People of faith tend to temper law with limits based on their moral philosophy and the value they give freedom.

The more faithless (atheistic) someone is, the more likely they are to vote Democrat/Socialist/Communist. This is in line with the argument that atheists raise laws to a higher authority than those of faith; Democrats/Socialists/Communists all raise laws to a higher status and seek to empower government to regulate and run all things on earth, from providing jobs, determining wages, running/providing healthcare, regulating what you eat and otherwise put in your body, etc.

These are not the sort of things lovers of freedom endorse, and these are things atheists disproportionately support. It's evidence to The Yell's argument that atheists make human laws sacred. Statistically, they are more likely than average to do so. Random Sharia references which miss the point do not change this, or even address it.

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

Re: Faith aint dying soon

"In the context I was speaking, you said a lot about philosophy."
If you want to talk about philosophy, faith or any mixture with religion, start a new thread. I was talking about religion.

"Yet it was no example of atheists not raising law to the highest authority imaginable."
...Hence the irony? I'm not going to use 5 pages trying to explain it to you, I will stop after this one. Just post something about how your intelligence is insulted or something, post a few insults, then imagine you won.

"The more faithless (atheistic) someone is, the more likely they are to vote Democrat/Socialist/Communist."
Tell me something about generalizations. In many parts of the world communists might be atheists but that doesn't make atheists communists. I'm far closer to FA Hayek then I ever was to Keynes, believer in democracy, and I'm an atheist so I take offense to this claim. Extreme right all over Europe (and many other places) are often opposed to religion as well. The opposition of many communist movements to religion is grown historically. Religious institution often hold a lot of power in the areas those failed ideologies started in.

Often communist leaders abused peoples weakness towards religions and put their own into place. All dictators use religion to their own uses. That doesn't make all atheists communist.

24 (edited by V. Kemp 28-Dec-2012 09:06:08)

Re: Faith aint dying soon

Little Paul,

I explained that all moral philosophy is faith, by most measures, just as religion is. To discount all religion as ignorant, stupid, worthless, and/or entirely baseless purely on the grounds of its faith elements is to conclude the same things of moral philosophy, as it shares the faith element which you base your condemnations of religion on. You're equivocating over word choice and not responding to this point. If my statement was over your head, I hope my restatement of the point here has helped.

You made absolutely no point with your Sharia reference. You were trying to point out that atheists don't raise law to being sacred, so you pointed out that Atheists don't embrace Sharia. Yeah, I got it the first time. But this outlandish example of atheists rejecting religious law completely misses the point that The Yell was making, which is that atheists raise law (secular law) the the position of highest authority. They tend not to limit laws with moral values like freedom and individual rights. Voting statistics back up this claim. It's you who've missed the point, again repeatedly equivocating and not responding to what was posted.

"How Atheist Voters Could Change American Politics Forever"
http://www.policymic.com/articles/20404/how-atheist-voters-could-change-american-politics-forever
"More specifically, Democrats dominate with what Pew calls

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

Re: Faith aint dying soon

"You made absolutely no point with your Sharia reference."
idd, it was meant ironic. I merely stated my opinion.

"If my statement was over your head, I hope my restatement of the point here has helped."
I think I do understand what you are trying to say here but my remark was still specifically targeted at religion not faith. Let me give you an example. Certain areas of the brain are responsible for certain emotions religious people feel during eg prayer (the so called holy/spiritual feeling). This kind of emotion is developed differently amongst people and mostly dependent on DNA. That of course doesn't mean environment plays a huge role. Good dna might give you the opportunity to become an athlete but that doesn't make you one.

Now these emotions might also occur in the brain of a neo nazi during a speech of Hitler but not during a large debate of different political fractions.

"They tend not to limit laws with moral values like freedom and individual rights"
Many libertarians are atheists. How does that fit in? I'm an atheist and take offense in being put in one large basket with communists. Its a generalization no more. Stats say what you want them to say.