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Atheists Believe “Truth” Has Magical Properties

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At comment 60 in this thread about self-described atheistic materialists who want portray themselves as being moral yet having no basis by which to be moral in any objective sense, Seversky says in response:

“However, it is a choice between able to be good in a way that actually means something and actually matters,…” to whom? That’s always the unspoken part of such a claim. Meaning only exists in the mind of the beholder and something or some one only matters to some one. Believers fell better if they believe that their lives have meaning and matter, which means they need a Creator to whom they matter.

Notice that, according to Seversky, meaning is an entirely subective pheonomena. IOW, in Seversky’s worldview, being good an entirely subjective narrative.  It only exists in a person’s mind.  There is no means by which anyone can be “good” in a way that is objectively valid and objectively meaningful (meaning, it is good to the mind that is the ground of existence, or god).

In the very next paragraph of his response, Seversky attempts to portray an atheist’s happiness as somehow more real than a theist’s happiness, as if the quality or value of ones experience of happiness would be increased if it referred to something objectively real. He uses a quote from Karl Marx to attempt to get his point across:

The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is the demand for their real happiness. To call on them to give up their illusions about their condition is to call on them to give up a condition that requires illusions. The criticism of religion is, therefore, in embryo, the criticism of that vale of tears of which religion is the halo.

So, after I make the point that being good would have more validity and meaning if it referred to an objectively real commodity, Seversky shoots that down by insisting that being “good” can only be a subjective narrative. Yet, he seems to think that happiness – which which would obviously also be a subjective state of mind in his worldview – can be of a higher quality if it was generated by a correspondence to objective reality (giving up illusions, as Marx said).

In that thread’s OP I said:

This is the tragic nature of the good, moral atheist; they want their good acts to be somehow more real or better than an act a religious fanatic considers and feels is good, but alas, under the logical ramifications of atheistic materialism, their good acts would be the factual, physico-chemical equivalents of Jihadis who felt they were doing good by driving planes into buildings. There is no source distinction between any act anyone does.

Seversky seems to agree with this about morality, but is apparently holding on to the idea that happiness is somehow different; that the happiness generated by physico-chemical processes under an atheist/materialist narrative is somehow of better quality than the happiness experienced by theists, as if the happenstance correspondence of one set of chemically-produced beliefs to physical reality would necessarily mean a concomitant better quality of happiness.  Seversky is apparently asserting that the quality of ones mental state of happiness is proportional to how closely ones beliefs happen to comport with physical reality.  Seversky is free to try and support this assertion, but we all know he cannot.  All this can possibly be is part of Seversky’s anti-theistic narrative; there’s no reason (that I know of) to believe that a theist’s happiness is somehow of less quality than an atheist’s.  Nor is there any reason to believe that theism confers any evolutionary disadvantage.

Under atheistic materialism, there are no bonus points after you die for  believing things that happen to be true, or that happen to correspond to factual reality.  Seversky’s only recourse then, in countering what he refers to as my “Pascal’s Wager” style argument, is that atheistic materialism somehow bestows a happiness quality advantage during life. Perhaps he might extend that argument to include some other ways that atheistic materialism produces some real-world experiential advantage. I’d like to see him or any other atheistic materialist try to make that argument either through logic or some kind of scientific evidence.  It is nothing more than a materialist myth.

The theme here is that for atheistic/materialists it appears to be important to their mythic narrative that atheistic/materialism conveys upon them some sort of meaningful experiential advantage over theists; that somehow, in some real sense, atheism is superior to theism and that it somehow demonstrates some sort of individual superiority (at least in the sense of setting aside “illusions” – which is a recurring theme.). The problem is that the nature of their worldview logically precludes that from even possibly being the case; they cannot deliberately understand and accept true things because their consciousness, sense of free will and responsibility are illusions generated by uncaring matter.

Note how the illusion of self, self-determination and free will that refers to itself as “Seversky” claims that illusions such as he can “set aside” false,  illusory beliefs and reap some kind of factual benefit.  This is an enormous metaphysical myth – that somehow something that is itself an illusion can set aside illusions and see and understand “the truth”, and that such a recognition will be somehow substantively rewarded in some way that escapes other illusions of self that refer to themselves as theists, as if some illusions of self are better than other illusions of self, and as if such a difference substantively matters.

If atheistic materialism is true, then we all have the beliefs we have and act the way we act because such things are caused by physico-chemical forces that have no regard for the truth-value of such thoughts and beliefs.  Additionally, there is no “I” that has supernatural power over what these materials and forces happen to generate.  It’s not like we would have the power to stop a physical process from producing a false belief because that belief is false; our idea that it is false would also be a sensation produced by the same blind physico-chemical forces that produced the false belief in the first place.  Those forces equally produce true and false beliefs and thoughts (wrt factual reality) and also generate our ideas that such thoughts are true and false.  If factually true beliefs happen to coexist with a higher-quality experience of happiness, how on Earth would one evidence such a claim, or be confident that the view of the evidence and logic wasn’t actually false?

It’s far more likely (under Seversky’s worldview) that false beliefs confer some sort of experiential advantage because, if atheistic materialism is true, that is what nature has actually selected for – the supposedly false belief that god and/or a supernatural world exists.  Also, Seversky seems to think that it is important to have true beliefs rather than false ones; but why? Surely he realizes there is no factual basis for the claim that holding a true beliefs confers a better quality of experiential happiness.  Why bother defending the idea that if a programmed biological automaton happens to think things in correspondence with reality that this also happens to correspond with a better quality of (ultimately) illusory happiness? So what if it does?  If Seversky’s worldview is true, our levels of happiness are entirely caused by forces beyond our illusory sense of control and self-determination. In fact, individual happiness itself is an illusory experience of an illusory self; yet Seversky claims the sense of happiness of one illusion of selfhood is less illusory than that experienced by another illusion of selfhood.

What the take-home point here is that Seversky and others, even though they assert themselves atheistic materialists, still argue and act as if they and others have some supernatural power to deliberately discern true beliefs from false and deliberately overpower the physico-chemical processes of the brain to force them to correspond to true beliefs; that true beliefs somehow magically confer a better quality of experiential happiness; that true beliefs are somehow magically necessary or important when it comes to life and the human species.  It is just as likely that false beliefs are necessary both to long-term survival and for higher quality experience of happiness, and that atheistic materialism is an evolutionary dead-end that cannot compete with religious faith when it comes to factually thriving in the real world because it corresponds to physical reality.

The idea that “truth” can be deliberately obtained, forced onto physico-chemical processes, and that it confers upon illusory “selves” a higher quality happiness or evolutionary advantage is an enormous materialist fantasy.  For them, truth is the equivalent of a magical commodity capable of overriding, transforming and guiding physico-chemical processes, and they have utter faith in its ability confer both immediate and long-term benefits to them and humanity.  One wonders if materialists ever thought that, in an actual materialist world, perhaps an illusion of self working under the illusion of self-will with chemically-caused thoughts might actually require false beliefs in order to function successfully and thrive in the factual world, and that is why such beliefs are so widespread and so pervasive historically?

Well, no.  Because whether they admit it or not, whether they realize it or not, they still think truth is in itself some sort of transcendental, supernatural commodity that fundamentally matters and necessarily affects our lives in a positive way if we can deliberately ascertain it and live by it.

 

 

 

 

Comments
daveS, If you're not an atheistic materialist, then the argument here doesn't apply to you. Please try and understand that these arguments are about the logical entailments of the premise of an actual atheistic, materialist universe as if we lived in that universe, and the entailments of what many atheists assert, and about how people who self-identify as such do not live as if their beliefs are true. Perhaps you are agnostic. However, if you hold that the experienced content of your beliefs can hold some kind of top-down power over the physical processes of your body, then you are necessarily saying that such physical processes do not cause the content of your beliefs, because those would be contradictory claims about reality. If physical processes cause the content of beliefs, and those beliefs exist as some kind of caused physical arrangement in the brain, then to say that beliefs are in control of some bodily processes and decisions is a semantic dodge that tries to position some physical states as being "something else" than a caused physical state. If beliefs are caused and are physical states, they will produce whatever actions they cause due to the nature of their physical arrangements and interactions, not according to whatever the caused consciousness experiences those beliefs as "meaning". Atheistic materialists cannot have it both ways; either their beliefs, their ideas about what is true, and their behavior are all physical conditions caused by matter interacting according to physical constants and chance, or there exists some form of non-physical commodity which allows for some sort of independent judgement and control. But, more on point of this OP, under A/M truth is a physically caused sensation in the experience of a physically caused consciousness, and those physical causes are not themselves necessarily wired to actually correlate to actual facts or truths, nor do those consciousnesses have any independent capacity to evaluate those truths nor do they have an capacity to coerce their physical processes to accept those "truths" as such. However, atheistic materialists such as seversky seem to think that we (if atheistic materialism is true) have some sort of capacity to independently ascertain true beliefs, willfully force them into our physiology, and then those true beliefs will magically generate a superior form of happiness upon our physically programmed selves.William J Murray
September 27, 2016
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KF,
DS, I second Andre and ask you to SHOW how your evolutionary materialistic scientism does not undermine the responsibly and rationally free reasoning self through self referential incoherence.
Well, I'm not an evolutionary materialistic scientism-ist, and I didn't sign up to defend that view here. I do think that truth is important to atheists in at least some cases, and that's what I prefer to focus on.daveS
September 27, 2016
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Andre,
How do you know they are true DaveS? What is your objective standard?
I don't know for certain that they are true of course (I could be hallucinating, or a trickster god could be fooling me, etc), but I think theists also have this problem. If we are talking about my beliefs regarding how far I am away from the cliff edge, ultimately my objective standard is a measuring tape. Even if I don't have one on hand, I have many years of experience measuring things and can distinguish between 10 feet and 1 inch.daveS
September 27, 2016
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DS, I second Andre and ask you to SHOW how your evolutionary materialistic scientism does not undermine the responsibly and rationally free reasoning self through self referential incoherence. (Cf here on in context for a 101. Note also the past several weeks of discussion here at UD and the consistent evasiveness of advocates of such evolutionary materialistic scientism.) KFkairosfocus
September 26, 2016
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How do you know they are true DaveS? What is your objective standard?Andre
September 26, 2016
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Andre and WJM, First please allow me to correct/clarify my post #14. When I stated that "That's not what I believe", I meant that I actually do believe that my beliefs are in control of the behavior of my body. I didn't mean to imply anything about what I think holds under "atheistic materialism". In my question to WJM, I was essentially asking whether he would have agreed with the quoted passage while he was still an atheist. (I know, it seems unlikely, but I want to be sure). And that should also answer your question, Andre. Whether materialism is "true" or not, I don't know. But I am convinced that it is important that certain of my beliefs are true, for example when I am standing near the edge of a cliff, because if I am wrong, it could be fatal.daveS
September 26, 2016
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What do you believe DaveS?Andre
September 26, 2016
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As to
“Seversky is apparently asserting that the quality of ones mental state of happiness is proportional to how closely ones beliefs happen to comport with physical reality.,,, Under atheistic materialism, there are no bonus points after you die for  believing things that happen to be true, or that happen to correspond to factual reality.  Seversky’s only recourse then, , is that atheistic materialism somehow bestows a happiness quality advantage during life.”
And he is sadly mistaken in his belief that atheism makes you happier:
“, I maintain that whatever else faith may be, it cannot be a delusion. The advantageous effect of religious belief and spirituality on mental and physical health is one of the best-kept secrets in psychiatry and medicine generally. If the findings of the huge volume of research on this topic had gone in the opposite direction and it had been found that religion damages your mental health, it would have been front-page news in every newspaper in the land.” - Professor Andrew Sims former President of the Royal College of Psychiatrists - Is Faith Delusion?: Why religion is good for your health - preface “In the majority of studies, religious involvement is correlated with well-being, happiness and life satisfaction; hope and optimism; purpose and meaning in life; higher self-esteem; better adaptation to bereavement; greater social support and less loneliness; lower rates of depression and faster recovery from depression; lower rates of suicide and fewer positive attitudes towards suicide; less anxiety; less psychosis and fewer psychotic tendencies; lower rates of alcohol and drug use and abuse; less delinquency and criminal activity; greater marital stability and satisfaction… We concluded that for the vast majority of people the apparent benefits of devout belief and practice probably outweigh the risks.” - Professor Andrew Sims former President of the Royal College of Psychiatrists - Is Faith Delusion?: Why religion is good for your health – page 100 https://books.google.com/books?id=PREdCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA100#v=onepage&q&f=false
Of related note, increased belief in the reality of the afterlife has been shown to have positive mental benefits:
Knowledge of the afterlife deters suicide. Lessons From the Light by Kenneth Ring and Evelyn Elsaesser p.257-258: As far as I know, the first clinician to make use of NDE material in this context was a New York psychologist named John McDonagh. In 1979, he presented a paper at a psychological convention that described his success with several suicidal patients using a device he called “NDE bibliotherapy.” His “technique” was actually little more than having his patients read some relevant passages from Raymond Moody’s book, Reflections on Life after Life, after which the therapist and his patient would discuss its implications for the latter’s own situation. McDonagh reports that such an approach was generally quite successful not only in reducing suicidal thoughts but also in preventing the deed altogether.        … Since McDonagh’s pioneering efforts, other clinicians knowledgeable about the NDE who have had the opportunity to counsel suicidal patients have also reported similar success. Perhaps the most notable of these therapists is Bruce Greyson, a psychiatrist now at the University of Virginia, whose specialty as a clinician has been suicidology. He is also the author of a classic paper on NDEs and suicide which the specialist may wish to consult for its therapeutic implications. (14)        Quite apart from the clinicians who have developed this form of what we might call “NDE-assisted therapy,” I can draw upon my own personal experience here to provide additional evidence of how the NDE has helped to deter suicide. The following case,,, http://ncu9nc.blogspot.com/2015/03/video-lecture-by-john-lennox-explains.html
as to:
“they cannot deliberately understand and accept true things because their consciousness, sense of free will and responsibility are illusions generated by uncaring matter.”
Indeed, if atheistic materialism were true it would result in catastrophic epistemological failure:
Atheistic Materialism/Naturalism - Where All of Reality Becomes an Illusion - video https://youtu.be/At6YNLBa2p0 Darwinian evolution, and atheism/naturalism in general, are built entirely upon a foundation of illusions and fantasy Excerpt: in what I consider to be a shining example of poetic justice, in their claim that God does not really exist as a real person but is merely an illusion, the naturalist also ends up claiming that he himself does not really exist as a real person but is merely an illusion.,,, ,,,basically, without God, everything within the atheistic/naturalistic worldview, (i.e. sense of self. observations of reality, beliefs about reality, free will, even reality itself), collapses into self refuting, unrestrained, flights of fantasies and imagination. Because of such catastrophic epistemological failure inherent within Darwinian Evolution and Atheistic materialism, it would be hard to fathom a more unscientific worldview than Darwinian evolution and Atheistic materialism turn out to be.,,, https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Q94y-QgZZGF0Q7HdcE-qdFcVGErhWxsVKP7GOmpKD6o/edit
as to:
“What the take-home point here is that Seversky and others, even though they assert themselves atheistic materialists, still argue and act as if they and others have some supernatural power to deliberately discern true beliefs from false and deliberately overpower the physico-chemical processes of the brain to force them to correspond to true beliefs; that true beliefs somehow magically confer a better quality of experiential happiness; that true beliefs are somehow magically necessary or important when it comes to life and the human species,,,”
Indeed, Atheists can not possibly consistently live as if atheism were actually true, therefore atheism must be a delusion.
The Heretic - Who is Thomas Nagel and why are so many of his fellow academics condemning him? - March 25, 2013 Excerpt: ,,,Fortunately, materialism is never translated into life as it’s lived. As colleagues and friends, husbands and mothers, wives and fathers, sons and daughters, materialists never put their money where their mouth is. Nobody thinks his daughter is just molecules in motion and nothing but; nobody thinks the Holocaust was evil, but only in a relative, provisional sense. A materialist who lived his life according to his professed convictions—understanding himself to have no moral agency at all, seeing his friends and enemies and family as genetically determined robots—wouldn’t just be a materialist: He’d be a psychopath. http://www.weeklystandard.com/articles/heretic_707692.html?page=3 Existential Argument against Atheism - November 1, 2013 by Jason Petersen 1. If a worldview is true then you should be able to live consistently with that worldview. 2. Atheists are unable to live consistently with their worldview. 3. If you can’t live consistently with an atheist worldview then the worldview does not reflect reality. 4. If a worldview does not reflect reality then that worldview is a delusion. 5. If atheism is a delusion then atheism cannot be true. Conclusion: Atheism is false. http://answersforhope.com/existential-argument-atheism/
as to:
whether they admit it or not, whether they realize it or not, they still think truth is in itself some sort of transcendental, supernatural commodity that fundamentally matters and necessarily affects our lives in a positive way if we can deliberately ascertain it and live by it.
And indeed 'the Truth' does matter very much, but it is 'the Truth' that most atheists I've debated on UD are trying their best to run away from, i.e. 'the Truth' of Christianity in particular: Verse, video, and music:
John 14:6 Jesus answered, "I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me. Shroud of Turin: From discovery of Photographic Negative, to 3D Information, to Quantum Hologram https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F-TL4QOCiis&list=PLtAP1KN7ahia8hmDlCYEKifQ8n65oNpQ5&index=5 "Alive" - W,Lyrics, By Natalie Grant https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3AFpgzjRD44
bornagain77
September 26, 2016
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WJM,
Under the premise of atheistic materialism, what does it matter what the content of my beliefs are in those situations, daveS? Under atheistic materialism, the content of my beliefs are effects, the illusory sensations of an illusory self. They are not in command or control of the behavior of my body, nor need they even be consistent from one moment to the next.
Really? Did you believe this when you were an atheist? That's not what I believe, for the record.daveS
September 26, 2016
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JDH @11 said
Didn’t you used to believe this garbage WJM.
Unfortunately, believed it and lived as if it was true, much to my regret.William J Murray
September 26, 2016
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daveS said:
For example, knowing whether or not the barista gave you the correct change; whether you are standing 10 feet or 1 inch from the edge of the Grand Canyon, and so on?
Under the premise of atheistic materialism, what does it matter what the content of my beliefs are in those situations, daveS? Under atheistic materialism, the content of my beliefs are effects, the illusory sensations of an illusory self. They are not in command or control of the behavior of my body, nor need they even be consistent from one moment to the next. As long as my body acts in a fashion that perpetuates its survival, what difference does it make what delusional world I experience mentally? Who knows what my body might be or what it might actually be doing while I imagine I am a sentient human being acting in a deliberate fashion?William J Murray
September 26, 2016
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I really think atheists who deny free will and personhood should be listed as a irrational cult. The fact that they can't see the incoherence of their world view is amazing. It is essentially allowing yourself to believe you do not exist. As Ravi Zacharias addressed one such inquirer, "Who, shall I say then, is asking the question?" Didn't you used to believe this garbage WJM. I think it is fortunate that even though my fascination with science started from boyhood, I was never infected with this irrationality. I just can not comprehend how any rational mind gets fooled into believing this materialistic crap. Can't they see that by denying free will, and essentially denying personhood, they saw off the only limb they have to stand on? Perhaps you can comment on how it is possible to live and function on the other side, because I have to admit I just don't get it. I am really at a loss to understand how anyone can believe this garbage.JDH
September 26, 2016
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How can a fully evolved brain be a reliable truth detector in the first place? Its only interest is survival.buffalo
September 26, 2016
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I think it's odd for an atheist to claim those of his persuasion are happier. They strike me, more often than not, as miserable. I once heard one honestly state in a public debate that he was jealous of the happiness and contentment his Christian sister demonstrated. This article reports a much higher suicide rate among atheists:
Religiously unaffiliated subjects had significantly more lifetime suicide attempts and more first-degree relatives who committed suicide than subjects who endorsed a religious affiliation. Unaffiliated subjects were younger, less often married, less often had children, and had less contact with family members. Furthermore, subjects with no religious affiliation perceived fewer reasons for living, particularly fewer moral objections to suicide. In terms of clinical characteristics, religiously unaffiliated subjects had more lifetime impulsivity, aggression, and past substance use disorder.
The tendency toward isolation mentioned above reminds me of Proverbs 18:1
A man who isolates himself seeks his own desire; He rages against all wise judgment.
What is there in atheism to possibly be happy about? The idea that there is no purpose and meaning in life is depressing. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lL0041GDsqEbb
September 26, 2016
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Thanks, Origenes.daveS
September 26, 2016
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daveS @6,
Surely you accept that true beliefs are important in some cases?
"True beliefs", in the context of the OP, are metaphysical beliefs; such as atheism and theism. In short, WJM's point is that, assuming that atheism is true, there are no bonus points for holding the correct belief (atheism).Origenes
September 26, 2016
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WJM,
that true beliefs are somehow magically necessary or important when it comes to life and the human species.
Surely you accept that true beliefs are important in some cases? For example, knowing whether or not the barista gave you the correct change; whether you are standing 10 feet or 1 inch from the edge of the Grand Canyon, and so on?daveS
September 26, 2016
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Atheists have always believed in magic such as abiogenesis, Darwinian evolution, and the laughable notion that the big bang came into existence on its very own accord...out of nothing. Check out a recent article posted at EvolutionNews.org regarding how atheists are - yet again - appealing to magic to explain the Cambrian Explosion. Here's a snippet: "Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence, some scientists like to say." That's fine. But if you want to make a case for a long fuse leading up to the explosive appearance of 18 or more animal phyla, sooner or later you need to show evidence. Three hoped-for classes of evidence have now been called into question by evolutionists themselves: the molecular clock, Ediacaran fossil connections, and now trace fossils. After 157 years of fossil hunting since Darwin, the reality of the explosion remains the best supported conclusion from the available evidence." Here's the link: http://www.evolutionnews.org/2016/09/trace_fossil_ex103167.htmlTruth Will Set You Free
September 26, 2016
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William J Murray,
Additionally, there is no “I” that has supernatural power over what these materials and forces happen to generate.
Indeed, even if we grant the materialist an emergent “I”, his position still fails to make sense, since, such an “I” finds itself surrounded by brain chemicals — NOT by thoughts, meaning and logic. IOWs the emergent “I” has no direct access the faculty of thought. The emergent “I” must first manipulate brain chemistry in order to produce thought.
It’s not like we would have the power to stop a physical process from producing a false belief because that belief is false; our idea that it is false would also be a sensation produced by the same blind physico-chemical forces that produced the false belief in the first place. Those forces equally produce true and false beliefs and thoughts (wrt factual reality) and also generate our ideas that such thoughts are true and false.
Even if we grant the materialist an emergent “I”, with the power of manipulating brain chemistry in order to produce thoughts, his position still fails to make sense, since, in this concept the manipulation of chemistry precedes thought. No one can manipulate brain chemistry in order to produce coherent thoughts, without planning and thinking.Origenes
September 26, 2016
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So Seversky is saying his chemical reactions are better than my chemical reactions. How do we test that in the absence of any objective standard?Andre
September 26, 2016
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Neil, I've engaged in several discussions with many atheists that have expressed the same view that believing the truth (supposedly, the truth about an atheistic, materialist existence) confers some sort of advantage or bonus. In fact, virtually every atheist I've ever engaged has expressed this sentiment. Indeed, the condescension and ridicule atheists often heap upon theists implies this very idea. And, no it's not a sweeping generalization; many atheists do in fact believe there is some sort of benefit in such "truthful" beliefs, else why argue and advocate as if others should also adopt these beliefs?William J Murray
September 26, 2016
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Your title begins "Atheists Believe ...". The first line of actual content seems to say that this is based on a single comment. The post surely looks like a sweeping generalization.Neil Rickert
September 26, 2016
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