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25 new of 432 responses total.
jadecat
response 263 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 13:25 UTC 2006

resp:245 Jon you write that "The Christian church doesn't teach that
logical thought about God is dangerous (unless you mean dangerous in the
same sense that fire, automobiles, and every other part of human
existence is dangerous)."

Which is too broad- there are too many sects in Chritianity to really
claim that they all believe in the same thing (excepting of course the
belief in God and that Jesus was the Messiah). Saying that Christian
Churchs don't teach logical thought about God being dangerous is simply
untrue. There ARE Christian sects that do claim that very thing. One of
the basic reasons for there being so many sects is that they all think
the others are wrong on a few key parts. 
nharmon
response 264 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 14:52 UTC 2006

Re 262: How tolerant of you.
fudge
response 265 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 15:11 UTC 2006

I take it you believe in fairies?

PS: who said I have to be tolerant? I am not a christian.
nharmon
response 266 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 15:22 UTC 2006

This response has been erased.

nharmon
response 267 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 15:23 UTC 2006

Nobody said you have to be tolerant; just don't complain when we don't
tolerate you. :)
keesan
response 268 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 17:38 UTC 2006

I think teaching religious beliefs in public schools is forcing your beliefs
on other people, unless it is done in a course on comparative religions. 
Decorating public places at public expense with religious symbols is also
forcing your beliefs on other people.  Lights and 'Happy Holidays' around Jan
1 is not.  Much as I dislike listening to Christmas Carols in businesses that
cater to the public, I can only object on esthetic grounds to that.  I doubt
anyone really believes in Rudolf the Rednosed Reindeer, and they can choose
to avoid businesses that play the song.
nharmon
response 269 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 17:42 UTC 2006

Sindi, even Christians get tired of Christmas music. :)
happyboy
response 270 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 17:53 UTC 2006

they listen to it on their ipods while they
pass legislation
banning hpv vaccines


republican values!
kingjon
response 271 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 19:04 UTC 2006

Re #253: That may be an accurate *historical* summary. That is, when I was too
young to have any insight on what to believe, I took the testimony of the
resident "experts." You might call it a "working hypothesis." That's not the
*reason* I believe in whom I believe. I believe in God for the same reason I
believe in my parents. For what it's worth, I am entirely willing to let people
believe what they will. (Sometimes sharp contentions get to my temper and it
may not seem that way, but I always regret it afterward.) After all, it doesn't
harm *me* if someone not under my care believes even that east, for example, is
west. I will in some cases try to persuade them otherwise, just as I would try
to persuade someone who was trying to commit a gradual form of suicide to stop.

Re #263: That's what inevitably happens when you get a bunch of people
together. Look at the extreme variance within any semi-major political party.

Re #268: I have said before that the public school system seems to me to be an
indoctrination machine into the "religion" of atheism -- but we've been over
that ground before and I don't want to start that debate again.
Decorating public places with religious symbols is not necessarily forcing your
beliefs on other people; a display could easily include only symbols of
religions that those designing it did not hold to.

For what it's worth, I don't like the commercialization of "Christmas" at all.
In the Christian liturgical calendar, the "Christmas season" begins December 25
and runs until the sixth of January, while the "Christmas" music on the radio
always begins around Thanksgiving and stops abruptly on Christmas Day.

Did you know that "holiday" by etymology means "holy day"?
gull
response 272 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 19:10 UTC 2006

Re resp:250: Sure, if God made it somehow physically impossible for us 
not to believe in Him, say by altering our brain chemistry, that would 
be restricting free will.  Simply providing clear evidence that he 
exists, then allowing us to take it or leave it, would not.  All this 
sneaking around and refusing to provide any hard evidence doesn't serve 
any obvious purpose to me, if He exists. 
 
(This is assuming free will exists at all -- but that's another 
discussion.  There's some evidence it doesn't even without a 
supernatural being involved, and several tenets of Christianity also 
call it into question.) 
tod
response 273 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 19:10 UTC 2006

Syria is about 10% Christian.  How would you like the idea of living there
with all the religious symbols "decorating" public places?
kingjon
response 274 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 19:38 UTC 2006

Re #272: The contention of many is that there *is* clear evidence that God
exists. If the evidence is (or if you prefer "were") in fact there and you've
decided to leave it, you'd still be saying "all this sneaking around and
refusing to provide hard evidence ..."

I will admit that *current* free will is not a central doctrine of the Church
as a whole, since it has proven impossible to come to an agreement on it. It is
simply the explanation of how some of the unclear passages fit together that
fits the text best in my view.
kingjon
response 275 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 19:41 UTC 2006

Edit of #274: My reference to *current* free will. I meant to add that I
haven't found any debate on the point that before the Fall human beings had
free will; strict Calvinists (and others) believe that this capacity for free
will was damaged in the Fall and is only repaired by the Holy Spirit -- who
lives inside Christians.

tod
response 276 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 20:06 UTC 2006

There is more evidence that aliens exist.  Do they have the Holy Spirit in
them?  How about black people?  Do Jews?  What's the criteria and how has it
changed over the years?
rcurl
response 277 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 20:09 UTC 2006

"Free will" is a neurobiological question, and the overwhelming conclusion 
is that all living organisms have free will in the sense that they have 
unreliable choice mechanisms between options.

I think Jon and I have a belief in common. I agree completely with his 
observation that "it doesn't harm *me* if someone not under my care 
believes even that east, for example, is west."
bru
response 278 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 20:13 UTC 2006

It hasn't changed from God's point of view.  Humans, being imperfect, nake
the wrong choices at times.
nharmon
response 279 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 20:14 UTC 2006

The mexican restaurant I ate at last night was staffed by latin
americans who obviously had difficulty speaking english. Would it have
been rude for me to try to speak to them in spanish?
kingjon
response 280 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 20:15 UTC 2006

Free will is only a purely neurobiological question if the body is the person
and the person is the body. I realize that's one of your assumptions, but it
isn't one I'm willing to grant you.

kingjon
response 281 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 20:16 UTC 2006

nharmon slipped.

Re #279: Rude? I don't think so; unwise, perhaps, depending on how well you
know Spanish.

tod
response 282 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 20:25 UTC 2006

re #279
All the hispanics I know are usually pleased to see someone show a lil
culture.
rcurl
response 283 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 21:03 UTC 2006

Re #280: there does not exist any evidence against the hypothesis that free
will is a purely neurobiological question. It forms the basis for
medical/psychological treatment of mental illnesses.
mcnally
response 284 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 21:11 UTC 2006

 re #271:
 > I believe in God for the same reason I believe in my parents.

 If you honestly think that the nature of your belief in God
 and the nature of your belief in your parents are of the same
 type then *my* belief is that you're hopelessly self-deluded.

 Unless everything you have ever experienced has been a delusion
 your parents have undeniably been a part of your life.  You've
 seen them, heard them, touched them, smelled them, tasted them.
 You've conversed with them and they've responded -- directly,
 unambiguously, and without your having to wonder whether their
 response was just wishful thinking on your part.

 To claim that your belief in God is built on the same sort of
 foundation as your belief in your parents not only overtaxes
 our credulity but at the same time denies your personal religious 
 faith -- after all you don't need "faith" to believe in your
 parents' existence..
kingjon
response 285 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 21:26 UTC 2006

Re #283: There may be some relevance in thinking of free will as a
neurobiological question, but your claim of "no evidence" betrays, again, your
assumption that nothing nonphysical, immaterial, etc. can possibly exist. 

Re #284: Any analogy I bring up will be criticized one way or another. :)
I have met my parents. Often. I have lived my whole life under the care of my
parents. The same holds with God. I have seen, heard, and conversed with God
("seen" and "heard" being the two words closest in meaning to the actual
experiences). And as for never wondering whether my parents were figments of my
imagination -- reading Descartes does that to a person for a moment, and
meeting God demonstrated his existence sufficiently that I'm beyond doubt.

Whether it is conscious faith or not, believing anything your senses tell you
requires faith. How do I *know* that I'm not just a brain in a vat? 
tod
response 286 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 21:30 UTC 2006

Maybe he's an A-sexual orphan?  ;)
marcvh
response 287 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 21:37 UTC 2006

"Seen" has a precise meaning.  If you mean that precise meaning when you say
that you have "seen" god then it invites a lot of follow-up questions (like
"what color is he?")  If you really mean that you "perceived" him then that
is something else, and leaves to our imagination which of the five senses 
did the perceiving.
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