
Bro Dave
(I just realized I accidently put this in the wrong area... I think it belongs under philosophy, if so feel free to move it)

Moderator: Moderators
Cute, but really is not a parallel. Most "Believers" don't reject anything "scientific" on principle. They may challenge evolution, but the rest pretty much gets a pass. As for anything being "spiritually measureable", I can't think of anything in this catagory! And, while they may indeed be suffering from having commited to an idealogy, they do not see it as "suffering", where from my own experience, there was a time when I was embarassed to have swallowed all the nonsense, guilt and fear.sin_is_fun wrote:Believers seem to have an unwriten dogma about anything scientific. Most,(but not all) seem to have a negative emotional reaction to anything not spiritually measureable. Are they suffering an over reaction to having commited to an idealogy that later embarassed them, leaving them incapable of objectivity in the arena of science?![]()
sin is fun
So moved.Bro Dave wrote:(I just realized I accidently put this in the wrong area... I think it belongs under philosophy, if so feel free to move it)
Here's our first clue... nobody is reading from a script. If I ask you to go on stage and act out a scene from your own life, you don't need a script. But you would if your character was fictional.Bro Dave wrote:Atheists & Agnostics seem to have an unwriten dogma about anything spiritual.
There are plenty of things that would appear to be physically unmeasurable, but ultimately anything which can be expressed by a human can be measured in some way. So we must be clear about what you mean by spirituality.Bro Dave wrote: Most,(but not all) seem to have a negative emotional reaction to anything not physically measureable.
This attempt at a generalization is obviously doomed. An objective assessment of spirituality, as I have pointed out above, is just as straightforward as any other assessment of human emotion. I simply don't see people failing to be objective in this arena. The only people I see exhibiting a lack of objectivity is in the realm of the supernatural.Bro Dave wrote:Are they suffering an over reaction to having commited to an idealogy that later embarassed them, leaving them incapable of objectivity in the arena of spirituality?
If it's really a dogma or a negative emotional reaction, they should get over it. But I find it odd: emotionally, the existence of the spiritual would be enormously consoling, to me at least. Unfortunately reason and logic stand in the way. So I suspect most of the time it's a rational (not emotional) reaction, and I see nothing wrong with that. Let each side present their rational (not emotional) arguments and let the truth win, whether it's emotionally rewarding or not.Atheists & Agnostics seem to have an unwriten dogma about anything spiritual. Most,(but not all) seem to have a negative emotional reaction to anything not physically measureable.
This is very true. Am I the only one who finds this strange? If one is going to challenge science, why stop at evolution and biology? Why not challenge chemical periodicity, electromagnetism, gravitational theory (after all, it's "just a theory"), relativity, and countless other scientific "paradigms"?Most "Believers" don't reject anything "scientific" on principle. They may challenge evolution, but the rest pretty much gets a pass.
McCulloch:McCulloch wrote:Moderators,
This topic does not belong in Philosophy since it is not addressing the love of knowledge but the ability of persons holding a particular position to be objective about an issue. Nor does it belong in the Debates section since it is simply a personal attack on the integrity of a defined group of people.
I believe that Bro Dave's post breaks the following rules:
- No personal attacks of any sort are allowed.
- Support your assertions/arguments with evidence. Do not make blanket statements that are not supportable by logic/evidence.
- Do not post frivolous, flame bait, or inflammatory messages.