rusmeister wrote:No argument. I don’t know what you have hitherto rejected except what you tell me. All I say is that I see a spider on your back that you don’t see yet. Saying, “Prove it to me!” is useless. You either believe or don’t believe. Tomorrow you might wake up and believe. Or not. Right now you don’t.
Why would
you wake up tomorrow and
not believe? The thought is nonsensical to you. And that's how I feel about what you just said. Remember, you think I don't see a spider that's there, but I think you see one that isn't.
rusmeister wrote:I word things the way I do (tautology required here). I will try to recode into “your language” to the best extent that I am able. Fair enough?
It's possibly the best way to start working toward the goal of understanding my view. Yes, you can think it's wrong, ignorant, idiotic, or whatever. But if you understood what I'm saying, you wouldn't have to
try. You would understand the pointlessness of something like
rus wrote:I would ask why you have not accepted Furl’s faith.
just as surely as I understand the pointlessness of asking you something like, "Why haven't you prayed to Thor for clear skies?" Why
would I accept Furls' faith? I don't feel what she feels. I haven't experienced what she's experienced. Her life is not mine.
rusmeister wrote:If you are reading TEM looking for PROOF that God exists, you’re not going to find it. What can be found in its pages is food for thought on things that require explanation in our lives that modern philosophy simply does not explain. In the second part, he discusses how it is that Christianity offers that explanation. You should really stick through the exploration of the history (that we think we already know) in the first half of the book. But if you are just reading in order to reject the thinking, that would be like me reading “The God Delusion” or Russell’s essay (“Why I am not a Christian”) only for the purposes of ignoring what it is trying to say. It’s hardly attempting to understand the “enemy’s” point of view.
Some things in faith ARE supported by logic. In fact, all of the parts that are not purely mystical in Christianity ARE ultimately supported by logic. Insisting that religion is necessarily an antithesis to logic is illogical – it shows a lack of in-depth knowledge about what the major religions teach – which, having been through millennia of testing by a large swath of humanity are worth seriously considering.
Yeah, that's just what I said in my previous post. It's certainly warrants consideraton. That's one reason I've read things like
Conversations With God,
The Language of God,
Mere Christiantiy (I couldn't finish this one, because it presumed things I disagree with, then built off of that presumption.),
The Upanishads,
Bhagavad Gita, and
Fools Crow: Wisdom and Power (Fools Crow was a Sioux holy man, and Black Elk's nephew.). If a supreme being
is out there, I'd like to know about it. Since I can't catch a glimpse of it myself, maybe someone will say something that I can't see another satisfactory explanation for. (And a satisfactory explanation puts me back to the starting point of: Which do I believe exists without cause; the universe I know exists, or a being capable of creating it whose existence I have no evidence for?)
And even if there
isn't a supreme being, knowing what religion means to people, the vast major of whom believe, can't be a bad thing.
rusmeister wrote:Historically speaking, as Chesterton says, it is the village that is sane. It is the loner (the individual divided from humanity) who is crazy.
Nonsense. Disagreeing with the majority is not an indication of insanity. Not even when the disagreement is in regards to a matter that you happen to feel very strongly about.
rusmeister wrote:I think we don’t, and mostly can’t know what catastrophic events will do to us. In my view, the only way that one can know with any good degree of probability is to train the habit of your faith (even if it is atheist). This, combined with my faith, gives me (although not you) a basis for optimism about your future choices.
I don't follow you. I don't train the habit of my faith in a way that might reasonably be expected to lead to what you consider an optomistic outcome. Where does your optimism come from?
rusmeister wrote:The thing that this is missing (my point) is that something that may “work for you” is actually harmful and the normal people around you would judge you for that – if you chose to go off the deep end, abandon your job, leave your wife and kids in the lurch, then “what works for you” would objectively be a wrong standard for making decisions in one’s life. Thus the example of the alcoholic, drug addict or compulsive eater. You can’t defend their choices by saying “it works for them” and have me consider you to be a rational, mentally healthy thinker. I’m saying that SOME desires and needs should NEVER be gratified (short term or long term) because they are wrong, however much they may “work” for the desirer.
Yeah. That's pretty much what I just said. The difference is; you are saying that what works for is actually harmful, but there's no reason for me to believe that. The worst case scenario is that it may prove insufficient in the face of various things that could happen. But my outlook on things would not be the harmful thing, it would only be a failed support. And, as I said, that possibility does not cause belief in any supreme being to spring up in my heart.
rusmeister wrote:I’d be interested on your comments on GKC’s intro to TEM regarding the special bias we in the West have against Christianity. And in general your comments on that would be of much greater interest than your comments on my second-grade writings. I have no doubt that there are probably some things you disagree with and a few facts that even I would admit have had light shed that wasn’t there in Chesterton’s time. But the overarching main points are dead on, and I would ask what your problem is with them (it just sounds like you are already hypercritical, and I’m curious as to why).
The first problem is that I hate his writing style!

It's the same reason I can't read the sports section of my local paper. Sometimes I just want to know who won the game. I scan the article for numbers, the score, and can't find it. So I start reading, hoping they at least say who won, even if they don't give the score. Paragraph after paragraph of speculation and armchair-coaching.
What's the freakin' score?!?!
Chesterton says, "I'll tell you what they found in the cave. It was an amazing thing to find. It meant that the caveman was ____. It meant he was ____. It did
not indicate he was ____. It forces us to consider the idea that ____. It ________. It ________."
What did they freakin' find?!?! It's just a personal preference. I hate that kind of thing. Tell me what happened,
then talk about it. I can't read my newspaper, and it's difficult for me to keep focused on Chesterton.
The second problem is that I was hoping he would build a case for
his beliefs. Instead, in the first two chapters, he only tells what the scientific community of his time was doing wrong. Granted, assuming they
did say what he claims they said, they
were wrong. I can't imagine how anyone seriously trying to follow the scientific process jumped to such conclusions. (And I thought hitting the cavewoman in the head with a club and dragging her back to the cave, all with her approval, was just in the cartoons of the 50's.

) But such things have happened often enough, so I'm willing to assume it really
was the scientific community saying these things, and not just some weirdos that nobody took seriously. But I don't need thirty pages telling me how less than a half-dozen ideas floating through the scientific community were wrong. A couple paragraphs about each would do the job. Going on and on as he does sounds much like the political advertisements we just went through here during the election campaigns. Point out a fallacy in the other guy. Fine. But then move on, before it turns into a trash campaign. Tell me what's
good about
your ideas.
Also, he's got some
good scientific principles wrong. He says a man turning into a pig in one, fell swoop is fast; but says it would be a slow process if it happened bit by bit over many days. He says the fact that it happens slowly does not make it less worthy of wonder, or make it need an explanation any less. But those two things do not demonstrate the difference between a gradual process and a fast one in evolution. Such changes happening over
millions of years, so gradually they cannot be seen individually -
and from generation to generation, not in a single individual - are a far,
far different situation.
Anyway, I'm still reading. He hasn't said anything yet to
invalidate his position, even if he hasn't invalidated the scientific one. I'll see what happens.
