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#241 |
Minion of Satan
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Posts: 8,799
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![]() looks kind of shit, if you dont mind my saying. mediocre at best. how can you even bring that up as a rebutal to that one watch with the big 6? impossible
but honestly, that actually doesnt look so bad, i do kind of like it. i like that kind of strap. that watch is also tastefully hobo. or tastefully cheap. but is it russian? i only tolerate the highest quality workmanship. workmanship only a slav can deliver |
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#242 |
Braindead
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Posts: 15,490
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![]() as I said, those are made in ontario.
I can buy them for you and then they would be even delivered by a slav |
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#243 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Socialphobic
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Posts: 10,001
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If it helps clarify, though this is unrelated, I'm probably more of a pragmatist than a relativist. I think most truths are (god substitute help me) self-evident, not in the sense that "if you don't know what I'm talking about, I'm not explaining it and fuck you," but that things which are morally wrong usually carry an obvious consequence, both to the person who commits the wrong and any victims of it. Basically, I think it is morally wrong for people to deliberately or knowingly hurt others or themselves. If you argued that religion in itself causes some inherent harm to a person and therefore it is wrong to accept it, I could easily jive with that reasoning, it's just not something I could be sure about myself enough to state as fact, mainly because I think it's more complicated. If you are, I want to know how, and if you want, I could explain in more detail exactly why it is something I feel I cannot be sure about and have serious doubts as to the ability of yourself or anyone else to do so. I'm going to italicize that because I think it's important. I wouldn't be surprised if it needs go no further than that. Then again, that could go pretty far. But just to get rid of some of the mess, for the sake of housecleaning, feel free to zone in on that or anything if you think it's the only real issue. [quote]i am to the extent that i do believe in (as in i belive in the existence of) such things as progress, right and wrong, truth, etc. but not at all in a way comparable to someone who truly is religious and not at all to the extent that would merit being described as "very absolutist." and this is where religion comes in. i dont think its just bad, in a subjective sense, i think its objectively wrong.[quote] Okay, so if you do think it's morally wrong, may I ask where those morals are derived from and what they represent? I'm going to assume that you would then be willing to make a direct statement saying that accepting religion into your life is morally wrong. Can you explain why that action by itself is fundamentally wrong? I'm not trying to harrass you with preacher-speak to then turn it around and make and "ironic" statement at your expense, I'm just wondering if you can explain how , for example, going into church and saying the Lord's Prayer, that action in itself, which is not harming anyone or getting in anyone's way, is morally, objectively wrong. In this case we can simplify that argument a lot by not even talking about the bad things religion can (apparently) drive people to. Quote:
Perhaps the difference in the way we see things really does mostly have to do with me viewing things on a level like religion as being possibly unhealthy or risky but different enough from person to person so as to not be not morally wrong, and you taking the hard edge on it. I think that's a lot of it, but I don't think that's all of it. Understand, for the purpose of argument, that there are things I do view as being morally wrong on an objective scale -- prayer or ritual is just not one of them. Okay, so now back to that other thing I was trying to say. I'll use Christianity again because I'm the most familiar with it and it's the most widespread where we live. Catholicism as a whole seems inherently batty to me, and I hope I haven't said anything that would lead you to believe otherwise. However, if you accept Christianity as a religion based on the teachings of Jesus Christ and the corresponding scriptures (which is kind of the point), you're always going to have to deal on some level with the element of interpretation, even if you're a Catholic. The number of Protestant offshoots has been growing since the time of Martin Luther and several of these offshoots are home to people who are willing to share in an environment of other people who value the teachings of Jesus Christ in a similar way to how they do and possibly nothing more. These people have a document in common and a contract of sorts to apply it to the same moral ends, but in Protestant denominations, especially the more liberal ones, this idea of a definite contract simply doesn't work. This I can state with certainty. Drop me in any UCC church in America, and there will be at least three different major splits in thought there, and we're talking major, fundamentally different ideas. On the level of Catholicism it's more under the table, a matter of just how involved you want to be. But the point of all this is, if so many people differ so radically in the nature of their thought, why do they belong to a Christian religion? I would suggest that it's because many of them feel that spirituality is more important than their one particular religion per se, and they are willing to compromise their literal or fundamental beliefs for the sake of spirituality, even if it involves listening to a minister talking about creation. You may think this sounds absurd if you are not familiar with general Protestant values or have not been in many churches, but whether you take my word for it or not, this is what happens. I'm not saying this applies to everyone or that there is any way to know, again, what's actually going on in peoples' minds, but a lot of what goes on in religion has to do with certain kinds of moral coding more than absolute literal belief. Sure, there are fundamentalists, too, I don't deny that, but there is also a huge chunk of people who do not embrace any kind of world view (even those who belong to religions that preach one), and you can't simply cut those people out of the picture or say that they don't count because they are not religious. I still don't have it totally clear in my mind if you think that say, going to church or praying is morally wrong, or if you just think it's wrong depending on how it works, so I'll leave that for the time being. But I hope it doesn't seem I'm just re-raking the coals of the "you don't know what's in their heads" argument, because this, I think, is more of a "you do know to a certain extent what some people are thinking and it's not a fundamental world view" kind of thing. The only thing I don't know is whether you would still consider this kind of religious bonding or submission subject to a moral wrong. Quote:
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For the sake of argument, I can't imagine many truths revealing themselves in a day to day basis that directly contradict the idea of the world being created when or how it supposedly was. And if we're talking about truth aside from fact, those are probably things people are always going to disagree on, correct? So to say that someone being religious would keep them from seeing certain truths could be more like saying that religious people will never see certain truths you see. And this is not even entirely the case as no religious person will necessarily stay religious. Also, you can't take behaviors and beliefs literally from the Bible as right or wrong because it contradicts itself, becomes obviously metaphorical and allegorical, urges you to listen within yourself, and praises the glories of full-breasted women. Everyone has to do their own interpretations somewhere. Quote:
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My point was that religion doesn't MAKE you closed minded. You either choose to be or you aren't. For some people, choosing religion might be a step toward being MORE open minded. It depends on where you're coming from. Quote:
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[quote]this is nonsense. obviously, for the sake of practical argument, weve referred to, one dimensionally, "religious people" and "religion", but i wouldt say that that doesnt reflect enough of reality. of course, like we talked about, there are varieties of religion and varieties of religious belief, but how varied? ever varied enough to escape the fundamental qualities attached to religion? This is a question I don't know that answer to, because I don't know what you mean by fundamental qualities, but all I can say is that extreme varience has been my experience in reality. I do believe that there is not always self-deception present in religion, and this I can only base on experience. I have no idea what your experiences have been, but I can only suspect that they are quite different. weve been talking about thngs in broad, generic terms, i agree, but i disagree with the idea that thats at all stopped us from coming at some kind of truth. even in the most bare sense of "religiousness", does someone truly escape that core? If it benefits them, I don't think that "core" matters. I can't say for sure that the idea of a "core" isn't an illusion anyway. A lot of people use religion to their own ends. I keep saying that, but I don't know if you get what I mean. Of course I can't absolutely know that not every person who is religious is destroying themselves from the inside out, but it has never seemed that way to me, and I wonder why it does to you. i dont think they do. so, while one persons religiousness can be more extreme and worthy of criticism, and anothers totally mild and in the background, and, from that perspective, its wrong to be so indiscriminate with ones treatment of the subject, but i dont accept that the language we are presently using doesnt suffice. i cant even count how many times weve been over this idea that varieties do exist, that its not all generic on all levels, but that theres still, nevertheless, some common elements between them all that can be targeted from criticism. so i dont think one even has to specify beyond the level of "religious" for this discussion to work (if were operating from the premise of a genuinely religious person and not this nominally "religous", yet fundamentally irreligious, person you have in mind) No, but I think you have a fundamental misunderstanding of the way people operate. And I refuse to believe that the second type is irrelevant, because these are people who are present in a religious context. Quote:
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Also, I never said that I wouldn't, in some ways, be compelled to think less of someone who was religious. As per your example from before, I would be compelled to think less of someone who liked Nickelback. But both of these things could always be mitigated by knowing other things. Or maybe this is just an argument about judging people. I avoid judging people as much as possible -- and this isn't just some corny little standby, I would prefer to judge something they say or do than something they are. Judging people themselves on something they apparently are seems 100% wrong to me, but maybe we define this differently, too. I don't see how it is to my credit to judge people, assume things, or lead to direct conclusions about morality. It really just doesn't seem rational. I think what we are dealing with has to do more with that, come to think of it. You can wipe out everything I just said even though I'll leave it since I spent too much time on it, and I can just say that I don't believe that it is right, in fact I believe in some ways that it is WRONG to judge a person on an abstract concept like religion rather than their actual words and actions. And even when it comes to judging a fundamentally religious person, the kind you're talking about, I'm still going to judge them on their words and actions. If someone started talking to me right off about the Bible being the word of God, I would be like, "This guy is an idiot." But if you told me, that you somehow, guaranteed, knew that this person believed that "the Bible was the word of God" that that was just in their head somewhere, I could not judge them on that. I don't know how to better explain it. |
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#244 |
Registered User
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Posts: 14,464
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![]() longest original post ever?
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#245 |
CORNFROST
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Posts: 24,888
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![]() I'm half-tempted to quote that 10 times
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#246 |
Apocalyptic Poster
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Posts: 1,498
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![]() I'd just like to take this opportunity to say that I'm very fond of my girlfriend.
(anticipates standard response of, "So am I, LOL!") |
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#247 | |
Braindead
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Posts: 15,490
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#248 | |
Minion of Satan
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Posts: 8,799
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#249 |
yer mom
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Posts: 23,180
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![]() hey, where's cliff's notes when you need him?
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#250 |
Minion of Satan
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Posts: 8,799
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![]() lie, im working on the reply/. it might be a while because i hurt myself biking and only one hand is operational for now. i tried writing some part of the reply with the one hand and, besides the fact that it just took inordinately long, i couldnt think right. it seems like getting the thoughts out quick before i can dwell, or just being kind of disengaged frm myself, is productive.
im replying slowly. im at the "new religion" part. fascinating indeed so what you think about shoes bitch |
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#251 |
Minion of Satan
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#252 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Minion of Satan
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Posts: 8,799
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![]() i think im goinf to take more pride in my posts now. im going to spruce them up with photos and casual asides and whatever. a post you can be proud of
http://img139.imageshack.us/img139/3...anlarge3wq.jpg Quote:
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yes please explain your rationale, im curious http://img143.imageshack.us/img143/4...aphiclg5zm.gif Quote:
and by "objectively wrong" i just mean that its not the truth. this is only possible because it makes positive claims about the truth but, at the same time, ideas on what is right and wrong is not strictly socially created and they do have some foundation in the objective state of things, but that isnt the way i think you meant it. or is it? this just becomes too philosophical then Quote:
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and i like this idea you put forward of christianity in modern day america just being a practicable outlet for a general spirituality (im going think about that a lot, its an interesting idea), but i dont believe that the choice is so unconscious or unaware. it can never be so innocent. i, for instance, have an inkling of that general spirituality but do you think i could just seamlessly transpose myself into a church environment and not change? the point is that i wouldnt be able to just discover the truth by myself, it would be told to me. i coudlnt at once call myself a christian and ignore its teachings and just maintain that general spirituality. there is a broader web of consequences, is what you might not see Quote:
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but this "new religion" thing is kind of troubling (for me). to just, like you said, help things move along and make things cleaner, ill just put my cards on my table (whether or not im shooting myself in the foot with respects to this thing were doing (im loathe to give it a title or whatever because doing so tends to have the effect of creating a self fulfilling prophecy. if i call it a "debate" than all of a sudden were "debating" each other and that has all kinds of effects on how we conduct ourselves and so on. i just dont like that. but, then again, calling it a "thing" isnt by any means neutral either, its just differently connotative. whatever fuck you)). but if i were to just address that issue, i would say that you couldnt call that a religion, that its something else. i cant put my finger on why, but i really dont think it is. i think it has something to do with submission. youre submitting yourself beneath a specific god and dogma. if you create it entirely yourself (im using the latter example of yours, the guy who invents an entirely new religion) its more egocentric than it is submissive (you could argue that all religion is fundamentally like this though, and i would entirely agree. i implied that before religious belief actually doesnt have any genuine humility to it and i stand by that). consider this: someone who creates this "religion" and practices it exclusively alone. in such a case i dont think you could call that a religon, regardless of if it concords with some previously mentioned characteristics of religion. i think theres something of an institutional element to it all. its something you organize something of yourself around, i dont think you can be both creator (or "discoverer" haha) and servant. i think the only way it could work would be if the "creator" himself claimed to be divine or above human or a prophet, which has obviously been the case for more than one religion. but that person wouldnt himself be religious, he would be just "it" (pardon the ambiguity, i just want to avoid using the wrong word) and a religion would come when a constellation of systematic beliefs and practices (worship) develops around it. i dont know. but i do know that this idea doesnt sit correctly, im just trying to discover why. i probably failed, but whatever Quote:
i dont accept any of this. hardly a word. you talk about religion as one would just spirituality, which is a different animal. the choice to believe in the dogmas of a religion is irreconcilable with truly open thought. those dogmas dont admit distinction. you either believe or you dont. to willingly put yourself into such a frame is counter to what free thinking and open mindedness is about. think about the nature of that choice: youre choosing to know the answers to life, without any remotely sensible justification, and those answers are such that they actually forbid any others. it preaches infallibility. it puts forward, not truths, but absolute truths. and on what basis are, of all things, these absolute truths being accepted? the answer to that is hugely embarrassing for humankind. this simply cant be reconciled. youre not just accepting some general truths, youre accepting, in essence, rules and constraints. this guy jesus is the son of god. to a devout christian, is that truly debatable? i dont think it is, and its these kind of sacrosanct, inviolable notions that give religion its special status as the closer of minds. granted, people can always just get up and walk away from a religion, and they should, but if were taking about religious people (people who are presently religious) i cant speculate as to what they one day might do. they made the choice to be religious and that choice is going to and does reflect on who they are and their abilities. a general spirituality is distinct from this in that it is (or it very well can be) mutable and free, it does not establish any restrictions. please dont reply to this saying "hey, those rules can often be minimal or peripheral" or anything like that. the question is does it mean you are more close minded. and it does http://img145.imageshack.us/img145/8...epal6008kn.jpg Quote:
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http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...rck80Jahre.jpg and those plain contradictions that exist in the literal reading dont just point to the fact that it should (has to) be read figuratively, ( i dont know why you are so easily satisfied with such a conclusion) it points to the fact that, hey, this is actually a lazy crock of shit. its like looking at some botched work of art with a big smudge and, because youre so set on loving the painting a priori, praising the smudge as a creative and brilliant. (look at the principle im trying to illustrate with that please) Quote:
how hypothetically are we talking about religion now? i blame myself from making it too -- what you called before, but is a term i object to -- "theoretical", so i cant blame you. but i really have to stop and tell you that i think youve been slowly creeping towards the most implausibly innocuous view of religion imaginable. again, its very much inline with a general spirituality from your characterization, which isnt just. bluntly: when were talking about religion were talking about christianity and islam -- and to a lesser extent hinduism, judaism, and buddhism. those two religions are far and away dominant and, quite frankly, i cant even remember the last hindu or practicing jew ive met, and i dont think ive ever even met a genuine buddhist. from a practical perspective, this is what everything we have been saying in theory is applicable to. we shouldnt forget that. im just saying this to keep us grounded, because the image your painting is practically of a entirely non-religion person who has some extremely passive beliefs (that he so happens to share with others) about god. do such people, who are yet nominally christian ( i wont even say "or muslim" because islam has yet to have its martin luther moment, it would seem, and theres not nearly as muhc latitude in belief as in christianity i think), exist? sure. but the kind of representation youve been giving them is entirely out or proportion and dishonest, i think. i havent met every christian in the world but i dont think even you would support the notion that those magically dualistic people constitute a faction sizeable enough to merit the kind of position youve been giving them within the scope of this thing. and i feel as though, despite the fact that i just explained some of it a paragraph or two ago (its funny that were measuring things on such a scale), have to reiterate my thoughts on this idea your presenting of two worlds that dont interfere with each other. wishful, i think is a generous way of qualifiying it. in practice, those metaphysical beliefs are not at all contained. they, like i said, wield influence. a belief that god is watching you and will punish you for your sins doesnt contain itself, it directly influences ones conduct in the real world. a beleif that there is no god would as well. a belief in reincarnation would also. and a strong enough belief in some metaphysical notion can (and evidently does) often serve to even override real world fact. theyre not contained, neither in theory nor in practice that abortion example doesnt do much for me at all. substitute that for anything else, any other moral question, and the same applies. the fact that theyre willing and capable to debate some things doesnt stand as proof against my comment that they have the answers, which seems to be what youre using it as. it would if i said they had ALL the answers (however that would even work out), which i didnt Quote:
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well i dont doubt that a lot of people choose religion initially for that spiritual aspect, but that i dont think that remains the extent of the relationship with a religion. its the doorway, if you will, not the room Quote:
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that core isnt an illusion. its what makes religion religion. the way i interpret these comments about benefits and using it for their own ends is that within the scope of these peoples lives, religion can serve some kind of productive, positive end. correct? this has been address though, so i wont go into it again Quote:
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on a level, yes. but it again has the potential to just, righly indiscriminate of that, be boiled down to basic qualities. does the person believe that mohammed was the prophet and that the koran is the word of god? if so, what individual-specific qualities to that belief could really ever mitigate that enough? to me its essentially inexcusable Quote:
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honestly, this just seems like an empty rhetorical distinction, i dont think it very meaningful. it has some superficial persuasiveness, and i think thats what youre standing on. i mean, what is somebody but the product of their actions? a "smoker", for example, is something someone could be, but does it mean nothing or little? they are that as the result of their choices and theres nothing wrong with weighing that for or against them. there are times when something somebody is isnt the result of choice (like someone being black) and in those situations its entirely not right to judge them for it, but in all other cases it entirely logical and just. so a muslim is something else somebody could be, but it is connotative. that state came from their own choice and that reflect on them. but there is a subtext to what youre saying that one couldnt reasonable disagree with, which is that one shouldnt be harshly prejudiced or categorical. or, rather, that actions and words weigh more in the scheme of things than something someone is, which i agree with (well, depending on the exact context, because that isnt always the case). http://img114.imageshack.us/img114/3839/431286bc.jpg |
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#253 |
Braindead
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Posts: 15,490
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![]() I couldn't believe my eyes when I saw the hippobus in Ottawa today in the morning. Guys have it, too!
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a3...wahippobus.jpg |
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#254 |
bonnie stars
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Posts: 12,077
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![]() i'm an amazing asian
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#255 |
bonnie stars
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Location: saxophone
Posts: 12,077
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![]() my netappearance should relflect that but it doesn't
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