I never asserted that you were delusional. I merely used that to illustrate a point, that if you are going to attach dogmatic claims to my beliefs, I am then free to do the same to yours, and this would be an example. However, I don't believe that people are universally delusional. I have too much respect for other people's beliefs to say so. And I certainly don't think that about my Catholic wife.rusmeister wrote:I'm speaking of a philosophical denial, not a scientific one. It denies the mass of human experience, the claims of miracles, visions, after-death experiences reported throughout history, dogmatically asserts them to be universally delusion and usually assumes materialism as its base philosophy. It doesn't look like you are an exception. ("All there is is what I see"; "I'll believe it when I see it")rdhopeca wrote:I have to disagree with this. Atheism is not based on a denial, any more than Christianity is based on a fantasy. You may choose to present it as such based on semantics, but I choose to believe that the world is as science presents it, and no proof has been shown me to say that there is an otherwordly presence. You can wrap it up as a negative and a denial if you like. But then from my point of view that would allow me to say that all religions are based on delusion and fantasy derived from an inability to accept the world for what it is.rusmeister wrote: Atheism does not have a theology per se, of course, as it rests on denial, on a negative, and agnosticism rests on a belief in an inability to know (they set empirical proof as the criterion for belief and deny/ignore other aspects of human experience), and the philosophies are therefore necessarily based on the experience of the individual.
Thus, the reliance on science to reveal truth. And it does reveal truths - about the material world. But it does nothing to explain anything about the human being other than the body - the material functions and is helpless before large scale and repeated reports of the phenomena that I described.
I only refer to the masses in terms of "strength in numbers", not for any derogatory means or an assertion of superiority. If you have enough people believing in something, even if its the presence of the fire God Ra, and your followers actively send missionaries out into the world to spread your message, and you do your damndest to make sure that no people are left other than those who believe what you believe, then you stand a good chance of your faith surviving. It's called a "critical mass", where enough people believe to make it survive on its own. That doesn't mean it's the One Truth. And many other belief systems have passed on through history, either through extinction or subjugation.rusmeister wrote:
rdhopeca wrote:Many artificial constructs have bought the farm down through the milennia. Longevity is not a claim for truth. For how many centuries was the world flat? A lot more than when it was round, that's for sure. Just because you've managed to build and maintain your belief system over time is not proof of its truths. It's just proof that your message was sufficient enough to appeal to the masses. And again, you are attacking my "lack of knowledge"...knowledge which is I feel is irrelevant to the basis for my beliefs.rusmeister wrote:But statements that "all beliefs are on an equal footing" display a lack of knowledge of the depths of the faiths that have survived for millenia - if they were mere artificial constructs they should have 'bought the farm' a long time ago.
But these religions have NOT 'bought the farm'. Buddhism, Hinduism, Judaism, Christianity and Islam are alive and kicking. The longevity does make for a stronger case - the fact that millions of people over thousands of years accept as true the idea of a creator and superior deity makes the atheist the historical exception - and the atheist has never dominated a civilization.
Again, if I apply your argument (on lack of knowledge) to creationism/Intelligent Design I'd have Lord Mhoram and Malik howling
Also, you seem to speak of "the masses" as something that you are separate and superior to. It also doesn't explain the enormous number of intelligent people throughout history who did accept faith - Isaac Newton, Samuel Johnson and George Washington, to name just a few (English speakers). Its message had to be sufficient to appeal to them, too. Or are they just part of "the masses"?
It does mean that over time the truths claimed that are testable are found to be true. Time certainly does play a role, just as it plays a role in weeding out bad literature, leaving us a significantly smaller body of print that we call "classics"; that generation after generation find truth and value in.
Which, of course, might explain why atheism has never dominated a civilization...it's never attempted to in the ways that other religious belief systems have.
I also don't equate faith with intelligence, so I don't hold it against George Washington or any other of the people you have named. There are plenty of smart people who are religious....and plenty of stupid people...and plenty of adulterers...and plenty of axe murderers...and plenty of genocidal rulers who have killed thousands in the name of their faith. Faith is found in each individual. Of course, there are plenty of smart, and stupid, and adulterous, and axe murdering atheists as well. I'm sure there are atheist genocidal rulers, but I can't think of one right now.