Re: Is there a God and why?

iJim wrote:
Doctor Submarine wrote:

As long as we're knocking out common arguments, here's one you all might be familiar with. See this chart?

http://www.reoiv.com/images/random/dark-ages.jpg

This chart is 110% bullshit. Please never share it.

Yeah. The dark ages (by which we mean after the fall of the Roman empire and decent into superstitious chaos) had almost nothing to do with Christianity. It was precipitated by the Huns and Goths fucking Italy's shit up. The madness that followed would have occurred regardless of prevalent religion. People were still worshiping Odin in large numbers at this time.

I've never seen this chart. The first thing I notice is that it should be Babylonian not Egyptian before the Greeks. Babylonians were the first to make detailed astronomical observations, have epic literature, and compile libraries. We get our 60 minutes & 60 seconds from the Babylonians. By contrast, Egypt was an intellectually stagnant society.

No, the fall of Rome can't be pinned on Christianity. But the fact that it took 1000 years to regain what was lost can. It didn't take long before the barbarians that invaded Rome in the 5th century to be become Christian. Theoderic, one of the first Goth rulers after Rome fell, was already a Christian of sorts. Paganism was wiped out on mainland Continental Europe very rapidly - just a couple of centuries. Even Ireland and Britain became Christian by the 7th century and the northern Vikings were the last to convert - about AD1000.

The early Church fathers (e.g. Augustine) directed attention away from nature to the Holy Scriptures (Scholasticism) and this dominated intellectual life for many centuries. Ancient texts were shunned as they were pagan (Greek & Roman). Classical statues were defaced. Bronzes molten down. The Greek academies were closed by the Eastern church. Stagnation ensued: Europe became inward-looking, closed-minded, and repressive. There was even regression as much was lost. So the term 'Dark Ages' is apt. There was virtually no progress in science, philosophy, technology, exploration, drama, music, and artistic techniques.

Europe didn't start waking up again until the 15th century (printing press, Columbus, de Gama)

A good book on what we lost is Charles Freeman's The Closing of the Western Mind

http://www.amazon.com/Closing-Western-M … =&qid=

A good movie on this topic is AGORA - set in Alexandria around AD400 just when Rome was losing power and the Christians started dominating.

http://lunaticfaith.files.wordpress.com/2012/04/agora-poster.jpg

not long to go now...

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Re: Is there a God and why?

I like your post, Avatar. Very good arrangement of words.

Last edited by oTom (2014-01-03 13:31:45)

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Chiming in to note that this is a thread and discussion worthy of us as a community.
Carry on.

(UTC-06:00) Central Time (US & Canada)

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Re: Is there a God and why?

avatar wrote:

No, the fall of Rome can't be pinned on Christianity. But the fact that it took 1000 years to regain what was lost can.

It should be noted that, while Rome fell, the rich part of the Roman empire was by then based out of Constantinople, and that Christian empire lasted for another thousand years without entering a "Dark Age". In fact, it was the Crusaders passing through the city (and sacking it a few times because, hey, they were the wrong type of Christian) who passed back word of the advanced culture there and kickstarted things back home.

I write stories! With words!
http://www.asstr.org/~Invid_Fan/

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Re: Is there a God and why?

avatar wrote:

No, the fall of Rome can't be pinned on Christianity. But the fact that it took 1000 years to regain what was lost can. It didn't take long before the barbarians that invaded Rome in the 5th century to be become Christian. Theoderic, one of the first Goth rulers after Rome fell, was already a Christian of sorts. Paganism was wiped out on mainland Continental Europe very rapidly - just a couple of centuries. Even Ireland and Britain became Christian by the 7th century and the northern Vikings were the last to convert - about AD1000.

The early Church fathers (e.g. Augustine) directed attention away from nature to the Holy Scriptures (Scholasticism) and this dominated intellectual life for many centuries. Ancient texts were shunned as they were pagan (Greek & Roman). Classical statues were defaced. Bronzes molten down. The Greek academies were closed by the Eastern church. Stagnation ensued: Europe became inward-looking, closed-minded, and repressive. There was even regression as much was lost. So the term 'Dark Ages' is apt. There was virtually no progress in science, philosophy, technology, exploration, drama, music, and artistic techniques.

Europe didn't start waking up again until the 15th century (printing press, Columbus, de Gama)

This is a pretty massive generalization, especially the part about there being "virtually no progress" in any of those areas. Actually, the so-called "Dark" Ages had advancement. Just look at the Carolingian Renaissance. That's why most historians agree that the term "Dark" Ages is inaccurate.

"The Doctor is Submarining through our brains." --Teague

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Re: Is there a God and why?

avatar wrote:

Of course, you can cherry-pick the Bible for the good-bits and ignore the bad bits, but in doing so you're already applying a pre-existing value system that does the filtering.

Yes but where do those pre-existing values come from? It's the culture in which we were raised. It's hard to deny that many of our culture's values are based on Christian principles, even if the people who hold those values aren't Christians; although it is evident that this culture of Christendom has begun to fade, and it seems like not long from now, many Christian values will be widely pinned as radical and hateful in our society (cue the celebratory responses). Some already have.

I'd say this is a bit off topic though. The thread is about whether or not there is a God, not whether or not we agree with His morals.

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Sam F wrote:
avatar wrote:

Of course, you can cherry-pick the Bible for the good-bits and ignore the bad bits, but in doing so you're already applying a pre-existing value system that does the filtering.

Yes but where do those pre-existing values come from? It's the culture in which we were raised. It's hard to deny that many of our culture's values are based on Christian principles, even if the people who hold those values aren't Christians; although it is evident that this culture of Christendom has begun to fade, and it seems like not long from now, many Christian values will be widely pinned as radical and hateful in our society (cue the celebratory responses). Some already have.

I'd say this is a bit off topic though. The thread is about whether or not there is a God, not whether or not we agree with His morals.

That's funny, because I'm a Jew, so I'm pretty confident that none of my morals would come from Christ even if I was religious.

"The Doctor is Submarining through our brains." --Teague

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Doctor Submarine wrote:
Sam F wrote:
avatar wrote:

Of course, you can cherry-pick the Bible for the good-bits and ignore the bad bits, but in doing so you're already applying a pre-existing value system that does the filtering.

Yes but where do those pre-existing values come from? It's the culture in which we were raised. It's hard to deny that many of our culture's values are based on Christian principles, even if the people who hold those values aren't Christians; although it is evident that this culture of Christendom has begun to fade, and it seems like not long from now, many Christian values will be widely pinned as radical and hateful in our society (cue the celebratory responses). Some already have.

I'd say this is a bit off topic though. The thread is about whether or not there is a God, not whether or not we agree with His morals.

That's funny, because I'm a Jew, so I'm pretty confident that none of my morals would come from Christ even if I was religious.

If you were raised completely apart from popular culture, like some cults or Amish people then I'd say you're probably right. But if not, some of our values are influenced by outside sources, not just our families.

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Re: Is there a God and why?

JC's morals came from the jews, just saying.

(UTC-06:00) Central Time (US & Canada)

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Re: Is there a God and why?

If our sense of morality came from Christian principles it wouldn't cause us to balk at Christian morality. That makes no sense.

Our sense of morality does not come from cultural Christianity. It comes from our instinctive sense of empathy.

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Dorkman wrote:

If our sense of morality came from Christian principles it wouldn't cause us to balk at Christian morality. That makes no sense.

Our sense of morality does not come from cultural Christianity. It comes from our instinctive sense of empathy.

I do agree that's the way things have been going lately. I think the era of Christendom in the 20th century greatly influenced our cultural values, whether or not we all believe in God, and it brought our culture's values to a certain point. Now that era is over, and human reason is taking over from there. Some Christian values will still align with popular culture (for the foreseeable future, at least), but some will get thrown by the wayside.

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Re: Is there a God and why?

And I'm not speaking for everyone here, just society as a whole.

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Dorkman wrote:

If our sense of morality came from Christian principles it wouldn't cause us to balk at Christian morality. That makes no sense.

I'm not positive that what you appear to define as Christian morality is valid for everyone. Charitable work, care for the homeless and under privileged, and much of the private healthcare is frequently performed by organisations with a "Christian" orientation.

Anglicans have female bishops, openly gay bishops, and a strong focus on community, however still define themselves as a branch of Catholicism (reformed).

Can you provide your definition of "Christian morality"?

Last edited by Dave (2014-01-03 19:17:51)

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Re: Is there a God and why?

The problem with anyone insisting that "Christian morality" is a thing is that no Christian moral statements are original to Christianity. The laws of The Pentateuch (which were Jewish anyway, before Christianity claimed the OT as their own) are based in large part on Hammurabi's laws. Jesus' Golden Rule was written before him by Plato, Hillel, etc. There is no truly original moral code in the Bible. As Christopher Hitchens said: "Name me a moral action that a believer can perform and an unbeliever can't." You can't do it.

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Dorkman wrote:
fireproof78 wrote:

So, like Eddie, we can't really know, can we?

Never for certain, but we can get close enough to be useful.

We don't KNOW that electricity isn't carried on the backs of invisible, undetectable faeries. We never can, if you want to believe in them. But what we HAVE sorted out about electricity seems to be reliable in that it consistently behaves the way we expect it to, so we seem to be close enough to knowing about electricity in some ways that we might as well use the term as shorthand. The addition of faeries gives us nothing useful in our understanding and so the possibility is best ignored until it has a reason not to be.

Yeah, let me clarify this.  When I talk about the importance of doubt, it does not mean we IGNORE evidence.  To the contrary, I believe we have to start from a premise of the limits of human understanding, then we go by the evidence in front of us, and then after that we factor in our own anecdotes.  So while I take comfort in my own ignorance, that doesn't mean I diminish data and observable phenomena.  I have experienced some things in my life that I don't have an immediate answer for.  But that doesn't mean I discount science and jump straight to the supernatural. 

When I was 8 years old, we put my great grandmother's ashes to sea.  My Grandmother was in a wheelchair.  While we were pushing her around Newport Beach, I was hit very hard by a series of images: the loose front tire on my grandmother's wheel chair, a crack in the ground, and my grandmother screaming in pain.  Three hours later, her loose tire caught in a crack in the ramp leading to the ferry, and my grandmother was launched out of her wheelchair down the rest of the ramp.  Is there a possibility I'm psychic or experience bouts of precognition?  I suppose you could say that.  Does this suggest I'm psychic?  To me, not at all.  Overactive imagination, combined with logic (it was a loose wheel after all) and probability can produce the same result.  I've seen lights in the sky move at unnatural speeds.  Aliens?  I mean....maybe?  But highly, highly unlikely.  So while I take comfort in the limits of comprehension of the gray shit betwixt my ears, that doesn't mean I can play D&D with the rest of my life.

Last edited by Eddie (2014-01-03 20:09:24)

Eddie Doty

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Doctor Submarine wrote:

This is a pretty massive generalization, especially the part about there being "virtually no progress" in any of those areas. Actually, the so-called "Dark" Ages had advancement. Just look at the Carolingian Renaissance. That's why most historians agree that the term "Dark" Ages is inaccurate.

Did you actually read the article on the Carolingian Renaissance you linked to? The so-called "achievements" throughout the 9th century are limited to the court, and the term "renaissance" is somewhat of an exaggeration and contested. How did European society actually improve? What are its great achievements, comparable to those before the Dark Ages (maths, astronomy, theatre, history) and those after the Dark Ages (discovery of the New World, anatomy, telescopes, heliocentrism, etc).

Transcribing ancient scrolls is not an 'achievement' if you don't add anything of value to them. Neither is Biblical commentary or yet more depictions of the Virgin and Child.

not long to go now...

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Also, on a different point, as someone married to a Catholic and with a deep respect for people's faiths....there is no way historically you can look to the rise of Christianity and not see the influence of other monotheistic religions in terms of creation myths, moral code, afterlife structure, etc. 

This is going to sound harsher than it is meant to be, but Christianity is akin to a Judaism/Zoroastrinism mashup fan-fic.  Jesus historically existed, and the Pentateuch was in place, but many of the gaps of the old testament were filled in with elements of pre existing concepts.

Eddie Doty

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Sam F wrote:
avatar wrote:

Of course, you can cherry-pick the Bible for the good-bits and ignore the bad bits, but in doing so you're already applying a pre-existing value system that does the filtering.

Yes but where do those pre-existing values come from? It's the culture in which we were raised.

The radical thinkers of the Enlightenment advocated for a DEPARTURE from the prevailing culture. You can't credit Christianity for instilling values that were advanced as a direct response against Christianity.

All the foundations of our modern liberal western society that we now take for granted (democracy, equality, right to open trial, prohibition on torture, prohibition of slavery, no religious test for office, freedom of the press, etc) came in the last 250 years when the power of the church had significantly waned.

not long to go now...

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Re: Is there a God and why?

So in answer to the original question, maybe, but it depends who you ask.

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Eddie wrote:

Also, on a different point, as someone married to a Catholic and with a deep respect for people's faiths....there is no way historically you can look to the rise of Christianity and not see the influence of other monotheistic religions in terms of creation myths, moral code, afterlife structure, etc. 

This is going to sound harsher than it is meant to be, but Christianity is akin to a Judaism/Zoroastrinism mashup fan-fic.  Jesus historically existed, and the Pentateuch was in place, but many of the gaps of the old testament were filled in with elements of pre existing concepts.

Yep. And Judaism itself borrows heavily from Mesopotamia. Noah's Flood is a good example of this. The story was ripped off the Babylonians during the 6th century BC exile. There are Flood Myths (Epic of Gilgamesh) which long precede any Hebrew writing - by about 1000 years.

not long to go now...

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Invid wrote:
avatar wrote:

No, the fall of Rome can't be pinned on Christianity. But the fact that it took 1000 years to regain what was lost can.

It should be noted that, while Rome fell, the rich part of the Roman empire was by then based out of Constantinople, and that Christian empire lasted for another thousand years without entering a "Dark Age". In fact, it was the Crusaders passing through the city (and sacking it a few times because, hey, they were the wrong type of Christian) who passed back word of the advanced culture there and kickstarted things back home.

Even with the Byzantium civilization, I'd question what intellectual progress it achieved. Any discoveries? Any exploration? Any technological inventions? Any improvements in human rights? Medicine? Any improvement in understanding the nature of man and the cosmos?

Reconciling Plato & Aristotle to the Bible doesn't count. Transcribing old documents from papyrus to parchment to paper doesn't count. Making shitloads of religious icons and holy relics doesn't count. Byzantium may not be quite as Dark as the west, but it's still fairly Dark compared to what came before AD450 and after AD1450.

not long to go now...

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Re: Is there a God and why?

avatar wrote:

Noah's Flood is a good example of this. The story was ripped off the Babylonians during the 6th century BC exile. There are Flood Myths (Epic of Gilgamesh) which long precede any Hebrew writing - by about 1000 years.

Isn't it peculiar that so many ancient cultures passed down similar flood stories? Maybe it's because a great flood actually happened. Different cultures infused their own myths into the stories, but the fact that so many of them told stories of a great flood tells me that maybe Moses wasn't copying them, but referencing the same actual event.

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Sam F wrote:
avatar wrote:

Noah's Flood is a good example of this. The story was ripped off the Babylonians during the 6th century BC exile. There are Flood Myths (Epic of Gilgamesh) which long precede any Hebrew writing - by about 1000 years.

Isn't it peculiar that so many ancient cultures passed down similar flood stories? Maybe it's because a great flood actually happened. Different cultures infused their own myths into the stories, but the fact that so many of them told stories of a great flood tells me that maybe Moses wasn't copying them, but referencing the same actual event.


Sure that's possible. It's the most likely explanation, actually--the Fertile Crescent flooded, and the survivors needed a way to process and understand it. What that doesn't prove is that the Biblical account is true by any means, because it's not. It's just one of many derivative legends that comes from a flawed attempt to understand a disaster. And considering it's the oldest piece of literature we have, it's far more likely that Gilgamesh was being copied by the writer of the Flood account (who wasn't Moses, by the by) than that writer having the one true account.

Last edited by Abbie (2014-01-03 21:24:39)

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Look up the "Black Sea Theory" for an interesting possible explanation of the prevalence of flood myths.

And bear in mind that any ancient tale about "the whole world" being flooded is being told by people whose entire world was extremely small :-)

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Darth Praxus wrote:

What that doesn't prove is that the Biblical account is true by any means...

I know that.

Darth Praxus wrote:

... because it's not.

You don't know that.

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