Re: I require the same standard of evidence to be confident in anything.
Dreaded Anomaly Send a noteboard - 30/06/2011 09:47:30 PM
Nobody's done it yet isn't a great standard, particularly while we're still trying to find a bunch of the stuff ourselves. I don't particularly expect anyone to find something of that variety, mind you, but these are all fairly new things.
We can only judge probabilities based on the available evidence, so "nobody's done it yet" is the only standard. The trend of hundreds of years of scientific advancement has been to debunk popular anti-reductionist ideas over and over again.
"Explain" here clearly means accurately predict behavior and describe all functioning, you know that. Weather and psych are probably the two most heavily pondered of such things, and we're making great progress, but we don't have them mastered like we do a steam engine, where one can pretty much describe and predict everything, last I checked anyway.
If that's what you meant by "explain," fine. It still lends very little support to your overall point.
I'm using 'faith' here as a pretty broad statement, people view it in a lot of different ways, and even an individual might have multiple hazy definitions, that usage is more accurate where religion is concerned. Also, much of what you're saying about religion applies equally to concepts like morality and justice and tons of other things. I'm sure you know that and would agree, but when I said I don't think you require the same level of proof across the board, this what I speak of. It's pretty hard to say something like murder or even genocide is bad without engaging in the same sorts of handwaves you ascribe to religion, yet you are making an ethical argument for gays.
No, the salient point (to which you utterly failed to respond) does not apply equally to morality. The existence of morality is dependent on the existence of people, i.e. the universe does not specify a single, correct form of morality. Religions make objective truth claims about the existence of things (God, souls, etc.), and those claims are not supported by evidence.
That depends a lot on the religion in question, and again the same thing can be said about a lot of concepts.
I do not see how it depends on the religion in question. The existence of other irrational beliefs (e.g. alternative medicine) is not a point in support of religion.
You seem to miss the core point there, if the assumption is that science makes people more likely to be atheist, then 'elite' or not, you'd want to know what they believed on Day 1 Year 1 of their scientific studies and what they believe on Day X, ya know, take 1000 random people who just enrolled in college and listed a science major and ask for their affiliation, and ask them again when they graduate, when they get a Ph.D, when they get tenure, etc.
Yes, that would be a more interesting study. The results of this study still weaken the implied point of your statement that "many" scientists are religious, because many fewer scientists are religious than people in the general population. Just from first principles, taking the scientific method seriously does not lead to religious belief.
You should probably let Helene defend herself
You mentioned Helene in your reply, so I mentioned her in mine.
Again, I feel you limit 'irrationality' to a very narrow focus, marriage isn't itself all that rational, eating meat isn't particularly rational these days, are arguing about this - although we've stayed pretty civil so I suppose we're still debating - isn't too rational either, we're unlikely to change each other's minds and neither is likely to benefit from it. drinking soda instead of water isn't too rational. This stuff isn't a problem for me, because my stance, same as on gay marriage is 'What's it to you?' but yours appears to border on 'destroy religion'... now I hope I'm mis-characterizing you there and you're just expressing a general and legitimate irritation with people who try to smash other over the head, or chop off their head, with their holy book without bothering to seek any additional justification, but it doesn't sound that way, and we've seen plenty of homophobia from atheist societies as I pointed out. There are also plenty of religions that don't give a snot about gays and plenty of denominations of Christianity that are at worst 'a little queasy' on the matter.
Now you are confusing epistemic rationality with instrumental rationality. Again, irrelevant.
The outcome that I desire is that everyone realizes the irrationality of religion and other superstitions and discards them. I do not advocate government restrictions on what people can believe, because that's not productive.
That's a pretty broad statement, virtually all law and morality, as I said earlier to either you or Helene, is based strongly around religion, culture and tradition and typically it's impossible to meaningful distinguish which of those. Prior to the Soviet Union, Russia was fairly tolerant of gays, they initially treated it as a medical and scientific oddity then re-criminalized it in the 30's, so it wasn't some old hangover of the old days, and even claimed that if they eradicated gays they'd eradicate fascism, and it used to bring a 5 year prison sentence in the borderline hells that passed for Soviet prisons, pretty much right up until the whole wretched mess finally collapsed. It was illegal in Cuba till the 80's, where marriage is defined as man and woman rather explicitly, so the whole religion as source of gay persecution idea has never held a lot of water in my book. China, another atheist state and one with a generally more tolerant attitude toward gays in it's history, has also not been a cheerful place to be of that orientation, and ha snot legalized gay marriage either.
Atheism is not an ideology in itself; it's a necessary but not sufficient part of being rational. Religion is the main source of anti-gay attitudes in America, which is the region of concern in this thread. The fact that it results from different old traditions in other places demonstrates that argument from tradition is a fallacy whether or not it's related to religion, but again, this is not a point in religion's favor.
New York Senate approves same-sex marriage
25/06/2011 03:47:43 AM
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I'm actually not opposed to this.
25/06/2011 03:48:32 PM
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I'm not sure why there was even any need for such explicit protection.
25/06/2011 04:04:47 PM
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so in your only Catholics are really married?
26/06/2011 12:04:07 AM
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Church Doctrine.
26/06/2011 12:57:39 AM
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That's patently wrong in that Orthodox weddings are explicitly recognized by the Church.
26/06/2011 02:42:00 PM
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Yeah okay...
26/06/2011 05:16:05 PM
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They are outside of the authority of Rome, and have, on occasion, excommunicated Popes.
27/06/2011 05:03:31 PM
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Seems fine to me
25/06/2011 05:44:30 PM
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Voting on civil rights constitutes tyranny of the majority, not legitimate democracy.
25/06/2011 09:37:28 PM
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Re: Voting on civil rights constitutes tyranny of the majority, not legitimate democracy.
26/06/2011 03:11:06 AM
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Good luck telling that to the deeply religious right.
26/06/2011 03:20:04 AM
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I am a deeply religious member of the right, and I tell them that all the time *NM*
26/06/2011 03:30:14 AM
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After a number of years of gay marriage
26/06/2011 06:57:07 AM
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That's more or less true of virtually everything, not a great example
26/06/2011 07:09:03 AM
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People shouldn't turn their own religion and/or opinion into law
28/06/2011 07:33:48 PM
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I don't recall mentioning religion beyond confirming that I was religious
28/06/2011 08:22:51 PM
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I admit I wasn't replying to you directly
29/06/2011 07:20:10 AM
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I think you should give this subject a bit more thought
29/06/2011 02:16:04 PM
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Believing things without strong supporting evidence is not rational.
30/06/2011 12:11:33 AM
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Requiring different degrees of proof for things isn't particularly rational
30/06/2011 01:14:44 PM
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I require the same standard of evidence to be confident in anything.
30/06/2011 07:43:51 PM
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Re: I require the same standard of evidence to be confident in anything.
30/06/2011 08:59:00 PM
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Re: I require the same standard of evidence to be confident in anything.
30/06/2011 09:47:30 PM
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No, I used the word irrational to mean that it's not rational.
30/06/2011 09:12:19 PM
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Re: Voting on civil rights constitutes tyranny of the majority, not legitimate democracy.
26/06/2011 10:38:56 PM
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I think you should give your fellow citizens a bit more trust and respect
27/06/2011 05:41:52 PM
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My expectations are guided by psychology and history.
28/06/2011 07:08:06 PM
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That's good to know, most of us do that, though we usually just call it common sense and experience
28/06/2011 08:55:23 PM
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No, most people don't do that. Reasoning from cognitive biases and anecdotes is much more common.
30/06/2011 12:18:40 AM
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Empire State Building was lit up in rainbow colors, looked cool *NM*
25/06/2011 08:21:03 PM
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I approved that years ago. They are way behind. Granted, I have no authority over anyone...
26/06/2011 12:22:33 AM
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The real issue is going to be when the Supreme Court rules on the full faith and credit clause.
26/06/2011 02:43:23 PM
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