Site-Wide Activity

  • Jake:

    How many 10s or 100s of millions have died as a direct result of beliefs? Without looking at a search engine a group of educated people could come up with the goods to back the numbers i have given. Pol Pot was not a Scot.

    There was one scholar who compiled the numbers of people murdered by their own government, not including warfare, in…[Read more]

  • Can you imagine the opposition to critical thinking as a key aspect of curriculum K through 12 and into higher ed? The opposition to opposition of the imposition of reason would be viewed as treason. Parents having little Johny and Jane asking questions about the bs in the temple, mosque or church? They would freak. Magas would go wild. Obviously…[Read more]

  • By 1st grade our critical thinking students ought to be leary of hero worship, of any system of thought that requires faith. Oh my aching back latch. How stupid to drop your guard and accept on “good authority” the BS that follows.

    If ya ain’t got the goods shut your fucking mouth or sell it to somebody who is no brighter than a rock baking in the sun.

  • Yeah man, Enco.

    Beliefs. How many times have i heard sentiments along the lines, ‘i don’t care about other’s beliefs as long as it does not affect me.’ Fooling a human is no more difficult than a dog that we train. There is nobody home in the majority of cases in which humans are hoodwinked by you name the ideology: communism, palestinianism,…[Read more]

  • Fullermingjr:

    I don’t speak for Strega, but beliefs are rational if they are based on evidence. Belief in supernatural beings are not rational and many believers, both clergy and laity, will concede that.

    Now, not all beliefs held by any given person are irrational or rational. People frequently compartmentalize their beliefs.

    As one example,…[Read more]

  • Fullermingjr:

    You wrote:

    You asked where I work. I have worked in higher education for over 35 years as staff and recently as faculty, and I have watched the broader culture change. The changes in culture and law involve gender, pronouns, marriage, and related, and thus these changes impact corporate environments including policy.

    I see.

    Are…[Read more]

  • @strega – Interesting perspective.  In the April 19th Sunday School thread, you responded to something I wrote and you said:

    A religion is by definition a faith based construct, for which belief  is required, not reason. [emphasis added]… I suppose Religion could be arational – that might fit.
    I agree that human beings often act as irr…

    [Read more]

  • @TheEncogitationer

    Ok, that’s a fair question. The word “forced” is too strong. In the article, the employee was offended by the email. I mean “forced” in a similar way. The issue is corporate culture, and indeed, the broader culture. You asked where I work. I have worked in higher education for over 35 years as staff and recently as faculty, and…[Read more]

  • Patience, grasshopper, this is a two-parter.

    1) Call me naive, I only learned about mogging today. Here’s a 1 minute intro:

    2) Here it is in a Hegsethian context, within the Trumpian context. I like the whole episode but jump into it where it serves comedic effect wrt mogging, leaving 9 minutes to…[Read more]

  • Not much interests me today.

  • Trump and Gang aren’t the only ones profiting from MAGA superfans buying his personalized merch.

  • FullermingJr:

    Even so, customers should not be giving out their tracks unless they strike up a friendly conversation with another customer or even an employee and it’s a personal interaction.

    If religionists wish to give out literature on a street corner while picking up any litter and allowing free movement of pedestrians or if they want to r…[Read more]

  • Reg:

    Remember Kim Davis in Kentucky? She was an elected county clerk who refused to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples. Courts ordered her to comply. She refused and was briefly jailed for contempt of court.

    Can a public official refuse to carry out a legal duty because of personal beliefs? There are two fundamentally different ways to…

    [Read more]

  • Fullermingjr:

    Even so, one could tolerate her beliefs and maybe an opportunity may arise where a real dialog could happen.

    As I recall from my reading, the gods mentioned in both The Tower of Babel myth and the Icarrus myth were jealous gods who didn’t want Man getting literally uppity. Believers in gods like these can’t possibly have a high…[Read more]

  • Yes, Fuller, i did say and i do mean that religion is make-believe.

    Were it not for indoctrination and the personal stake and emotions of wish thinking then god(s) would be as easy to discard as Santa Clause or fill in the blank. It is childish. It is infantile. But we are human and there you are.

  • Fullrermingjr:

    So, from an atheistic perspective, our “nature” evolved in such a way that these experiences are universal? Is that what you are saying?

    An important category distinction to make here:

    Atheism is a philosophical position of non-belief in the existence of a supernatural being.

    Evolution is a scientific explanation based on evi…[Read more]

  • @TheEncogitationer

    I’ve watched some of Discovery, but didn’t like it as much. I also watch a few episodes of a new series, Star Trek Academy.  Finally, I’ve watched several Strange New Worlds and it feels a little like TOS but upgraded to modern cinematic technology.  Even so, the real science of space travel and many other things in the S…[Read more]

  • @fullermingjr No religion is rational by the very definition of the word rational – derived from logic and reason etc.

    A religion is by definition a faith based construct, for which belief  is required, not reason.

    A Venn diagram of Religion and Rationality would barely touch at their potential meeting point.
    I suppose Religion could be…[Read more]

  • @TheEncogitationer

    Well, I don’t believe in learning other languages. I believe God gave men different tongues and divided them at The Tower of Babel and that’s how it’s meant to be.

    How very sad!  The woman’s faith system that said that statement… that thinks humanity should be divided this way has completely missed (a) the point of Babel a…[Read more]

  • Fullermingjr:

    To address your workplace concerns, first, understand, I’m not lumping you in with other religionists, but I’m just recounting what I’ve encountered:

    I myself take my breaks and eat my lunch alone and only try to talk shop, not philosophy or religion. Politics sometimes unavoidably comes up at work with talk about health care…[Read more]

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