Fallacies about Faith

by tec 340 Replies latest jw friends

  • punkofnice
    punkofnice

    Blimey....got totally lost in this one.

    Once upon a time I was a JW....then a Christian....dabbled with mysticism...now I'm an atheist.

    I just want to point out....if it hasn't already been pointed out.......atheists and theists weren't always born that way.

    There seems to be a very US vs: THEM thing going on at times as if there are 2 immutible groups. Bifurcated thinking ala JW propaganda.

    ....but hey...like I say I got lost on this thread................just ignore me, I'll go away...............

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  • 2+2=5
    2+2=5

    Come back punk!!! Jesus loves you!

  • Band on the Run
    Band on the Run

    He loves you as much as he can love a man.

  • punkofnice
    punkofnice

    If Jesus loves me he's got a crappy way of showing it!

    In fact, I'd go as far as to say that I find it amazing that the way Jesus shows love is exactly the same way it'd work if he didn't exist!

  • adamah
    adamah

    Nickolas said- Those who say ridiculous ideas need to be ridiculed are morons.

    Really? What definition of ridicule or ridiculous are you using?

    adjective: ridiculous

    1. deserving or inviting derision or mockery; absurd.

    By definition, a ridiculous idea is one that's worthy of ridicule (and note how both ridiculous and ridicule contain the same root). So saying ridiculous ideas don't warrant ridicule is as illogical as saying that praise-worthy ideas don't deserve praised. Huh?

    Perhaps you meant to say that someone else's ideas don't deserve ridicule, since everyone's entitled to their own beliefs. I don't necessarily agree, since that would require denying the existence of SOME ideas that ARE so completely absurd and ridiculous, but the question is who gets to decide (aka values vary)?

    That's why we rely on logic and definitions of words: it's a shared agreement to meanings, and we're not entitled to just make up ideas or redefine words, and then expect to be taken seriously.

    Nickolas said- Tammy has every right to voice her thoughts. You have every right to ignore them. Tune out. You are otherwise not so much an atheist as an anti-religionist. Big difference. Zealotry takes many forms.

    Atheism has NOTHING to do with any other issue than stating simply one's position of their nonbelief in God(s). Period. That's it.

    It doesn't mean the person who professes atheism is necessarily a skeptic (one who demands proof before accepting beliefs), since there's some atheists who also carry a belief in spiritism/ghosts/supernatural forces, etc. Some atheists reject a God belief without basing it on any evidence other than their intuition, i.e. they simply don't WANT Gods to exist. They're the flip-side of those believers who simply WANT God TO exist without being able to offer any evidence besides their intuition and who rely on faith to fill in the gaps. Both are essentially the same, and offer equally vapid and shallow reasons to believe or not, since they allow their desires to control their beliefs, and not evidence.

    At any rate, if someone dares to state their beliefs on the issue of God's existence (whether it's the claim of believing or NOT believing in Gods, i.e. the 'hard' form of theism/atheism alike), then THEY carry the burden of proving their claim to others.

    Now if they cannot provide any ammunition, then there's nothing compelling them to open their mouthes and speak the claim. Point being, in a public forum, one doesn't HAVE to to open their mouths, and they likely shouldn't, if they're too fragile to withstand a response or criticism in return. They can always just keep their mouths shut, in essence sticking to the agnostic position (i.e. 'not knowing', unable to decide and hence, they haven't yet come to a conclusion on the issue to share with others, other than to ask questions).

    But expecting theists to enjoy some kind of advantage and the right to spew their nonsense without experiencing a counter-argument to emerge constitutes "special pleading", and fortunately we're long-past the age when atheists were killed for expressing their heretical and blasphemous thoughts, while believers enjoyed favored and privileged positions to sing their hosannas on every corner.

    PS Viviane, you're right. Thanks.

    I've been citing the "tu quoque" fallacy so often that I failed to post a link this time, but here it is:

    From Wikipedia:

    Tu quoque / t ˈ k w k w / , [1] (Latin for "you, too" or "you, also") or the appeal to hypocrisy, is a logical fallacy that attempts to discredit the opponent's position by asserting the opponent's failure to act consistently in accordance with that position; it attempts to show that a criticism or objection applies equally to the person making it. This dismisses someone's point of view based on criticism of the person's inconsistency and not the position presented [2] whereas a person's inconsistency should not discredit the position. Thus, it is a form of the ad hominem argument. [3] To clarify, although the person being attacked might indeed be acting inconsistently or hypocritically, this does not invalidate their argument.

    OR in plain English, from:

    http://grammar.about.com/od/tz/g/tuquoqueterm.htm

    "Of all human instincts, not even the urge to say 'I told you so' is stronger than the response called tu quoque: 'Look who's talking.' To judge from children, it is innate ('Cathy says you took her chocolate,' 'Yes but she stole my doll'), and we don't grow out of it . . ..

    Point being, the fallacy includes the element of "you did it, too", and YES, TEC is frequently known to play that card when she is running out of ammo as a false charge of hypocrisy of last resort, and I've pointed it out repeatedly, hoping it'll stick (if not with her, at least for the education of others).

    Rather ironic that 'tu quoque' comes up, in a thread entitled "fallacies about faith", as if the tu quoque fallacy is a last-ditch effort to protect one's faith!

    Adam

  • LucidChimp
    LucidChimp

    "saying ridiculous ideas don't warrant ridicule is as illogical as saying that praise-worthy ideas don't deserve praised"

    Beat me to it.

  • Band on the Run
    Band on the Run

    Jesus will not talk to me. I don't want Jesus to talk to me. If Jesus talked to me, I hope I would question him about his lack of love for starving, oppressed people around the world. Specifics would be asked. I don't believe Jesus talks to anyone. It is pure conceit or delusion.

    I would be afraid of men/women in white coats locking me up. Mental illness is not pretty. Some people romanticize its most serious forms. Most of all, I would tell Jesus what people full of conceit about their groovy personal, sexual relationship with Jesus are like. The smugness of belief in delusions. Downright fraud.

    I live in one of the largest cities in the world. My world is interrupted by hawksters. I thought I heard every possible con in the world. Well, I did work for a federal prosecutor and had access to the frauds division. When I read about baby teeth I wondered what I ever did that God would subject me to such lunacy.

    Of course, the person detailing what some funny sounding dude said also gave free legal advice on this forum. Not once was she even within miles of a correct answer. Said person never was a lawyer. Forum members may have been misled by her sincere belief in her false answers.

    There is something very different with the voice hearing crowd than with fundamentalists or political conspiracists here. Perhaps I feel one group is more fraudulent than others. Because I do stand up and argue for civility and free speech rights. Something is not kosher. I may not agree with other posters. Others do not seem likely to hurt others. Imagine leaving the Witnesses and reading about baby teeth and salvation. I truly had to read the baby tooth argument several times. I learned a lot about beliefs around the world in cultural anthropology. Vodoo-merely another culture. You don't have to agree with people. Free speech rights are often described as a robust marketplace of ideas. Blandly agreeing is not standing for someone's right. The federal authorities had every right to investigate David Koresh and Jim Jones.

    I don't have to ignore either. Con people benefit from silence. How many years are we going to hear about voice hearing? There is no deep content. Heck, we don't even find out what this weird name person says. Test it? How? Do we call the Good Housekeeping Institute? Scams are scams.

    The fundies believe in principles. There are certain aspects of fundamentalism, such as a close warm community, that I admire. Tammy never was a Witness. I wonder why she is here. The concept of an elect has always bothered me. I always had suspicions about the anointed in the Witnesses. As long as Simon allows me to post, I will write that I disagree with Tammy.

    I don't like false prophets. Yes, it is judgmental. There is nothing wrong with exercising judgment and discretion. Tammy is a big girl. I stood up to leftist fascists. Tammy is just another flavor. I could say more but it is not necessary. Being a person with no opinions has never seemed a good thing to me. Strangely, I prefer a Tammy or Shelby to some "let's not argue or discuss anything." Simon does not get hits b/c this place is polite. Not every viewpoint has to be coddled or celebrated. These are my values. Yes, I have values and biases. I am human. This is the never-ending thread about nothing.

  • Etude
    Etude

    (I've been away for a while and then notice that the thread had been bumped)

    Perry (from your 4090 post)

    I’m unaware of the intimate details of Kirsen’s politics. But, I rather doubt your phrase: “Kirsen is a liberal democrat commentator on Fox News”. There is no such thing on FoxNews. I have listened to her and she has not given me any indication that she’s a liberal. One clue to this is the correlation in the article you cited about her being an ultra liberal and an atheist. The implication (especially at FoxNews) is that if you’re conservative, you tend to be religious (especially a Christian). Of course, I’m generalizing and not saying at all that there can’t be any atheist conservatives. But they would stand out like a baboon’s but in heat.

    “Now he reveals himself privately once someone decides to believe. Do you blame him?”

    Yes. As a matter of fact I do (as if I could when he’s not a real person). The fundamental problem is that whatever he did before is only here-say and unverifiable. Remarkably, it maintains consistency to this day. The people to whom he reveals himself have only their own mind to give testimony. Sorry, but I need more than that. It’s not that I’m arrogantly demanding anything from a supreme being. It’s that without some sort of verification, I can’t distinguish credulity from reality. I can’t determine if I’m deluding myself. I can’t be assured of what is real. I thought I had the answer once (maybe twice) and was greatly deceived. I’m not doing that again.

  • Etude
    Etude

    mrhhome (from your post #96)

    You really take the cake! You completely ignore that the morality of an action (even if you separate it from the person) is totally subjective; that your own prejudices and predilections make you define for yourself and others what morality means. Well, I can see why you feel that anyone who is not a believer is immoral, or in your case in order to super-fine tune your belief, you think that believers act immorally. Does it stand to reason then that believers are always moral or (according to you) act morally? Check your history again and look around you to see how many pious-faced religious people are not only immoral but are bold-faced criminals.

  • Etude
    Etude

    tec

    Tammy: I take it that you were once one of the JWs. Did you believe that they had the “truth” then? Your statement “Truth is truth…” needs clarification. Is it the truth you believed as a JW or is it what you believe now? What is true about truth is that what makes it so is based on what can be verified. Regardless of the intensity of your feelings and those of mrhome and Perry, that does little to establish that what you all perceive is true. Even when we have sufficient evidence to support something as true, we have to keep an open mind because some other piece of evidence may come along and adjust that truth. We’ve been through this before (I mean specifically you and me). I’ve accepted that what you believe is real to you. But I’ve clearly established that what you believe is real cannot be supported outside of your own mind; that it can’t be assured to anyone that it is a part of reality.

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