Stealth Moose
Umbrella Elite
Originally posted by bluewaterrider
I think we're having some language difficulties here.
I've been answering your questions as directly as I know how.
I don't see how there could be language difficulties when I am proficient with the English tongue and use it daily. Perhaps you have the difficulty here?
I think the problem is you're expecting a certain form of answer, or want me to give exactly the answer YOU would give,
if you were to pose to yourself your own question, and don't realize it.
No, I want you to think outside of your comfort zone. Your answers and positions thus far imply that you can't reason outside of the POV that is sympathetic to Christianity, and furthermore you are unwilling to do so. You've equated faith-based beliefs in beings unable to be empirically verified as potentially dangerous, and brought up some ridiculous 9/11 reference, as if only Muslims are capable of great evil due to faith.
I've asked you many many times WHY and you seem to think that directly answering me is somehow a losing position and you just don't do it.
Restate your individual questions as a numbered list or something.I'll see how many I can cover for you.
How lazy are you? This thread is barely three pages long. Find them yourself. I shouldn't have to spoonfeed my own readily available posts for your convenience.
I DID answer the why, though obviously not in the way you were expecting.
The only thing you gave me that was a complete thought was someone else's thoughts. And even then, it didn't satisfy the direct question I posed to you.
Perhaps the problem is you're treating this as purest abstraction, like a set of "How Would You Move Mount Fuji?" problems.
I'm expecting you to be real to yourself. It is not a "pure abstraction" to ask you if you give validity to equally verifiable faith-based constructs. The beings I used were pure fantasy, but their ability to be proved was about the same. You're attempting to make this question unrealistic in an attempt to avoid answering the very problem you brought up. Why do you immediately think of danger and 9/11 when someone says "X believes in figure Y", and Y isn't Christ?
Why the double-standard?
You're expecting an answer not based on how [b]I would actually behave in real life, even though your surface approach suggests that to be your goal, but how I might behave if I were some sort of PLB:(excerpted from the book "How Would You Move Mount Fuji?", by William Poundstone, which is a total waste of time since the question I posed has entirely realistic expectations. Using others to defend your inability to answer direct questions is not a sign of being well-read and educated, but a sign of obfuscating the truth in an attempt to avoid taking personal responsibility for your own thoughts and feelings)[/B]
What rubbish.
The question was simple. At first, you chose to answer it, even if your answer was full of all sorts of side-stepping the comparison of Christianity to the Whatever belief systems I proposed to get you, as an individual, to show to the rest of us what you consider the foundations for a valid belief system. What separates "I believe, therefore respect my beliefs" versus "I believe, because I have proof, and I can show you proof, so respect my beliefs".
You have attempted to spin the question so much Fox News is about to sue to for stealing their method.
Let's review your stance:
Originally posted by bluewaterrider
I've been giving further thought to this post of yours.The reason, alluded to in my prior response, that I wouldn't be teasing is because belief in these 3 things in particular suggest that person might actually be a potential danger to me.
I would be taking the PERSON seriously, not necessarily his or her belief.
The potential danger the PERSON poses to me is what is no laughing matter.
I don't know how politically incorrect we're allowed to be on this forum; I would point to 911 as an illustration of how [b]belief
translated into action by people, regardless of whether the belief is valid or not, can lead to some very serious consequences indeed ... [/B]
Now let's review the question I posed to you that elicited this response:
Originally posted by Stealth Moose
Yes, some things are hard to believe, but the story of Creation requires a complete "and then magic made it all happen" mindset to be taken seriously. You would tease an adult mercilessly for believing in Santa Claus, the Tooth-fairy, or the Easter Bunny, but if they believe in Magic Six-Day Creation Yahweh, they must be taken seriously.
You went from "adults who believe in Santa Clause, etc." to "danger, 9/11", from that. What does that tell us about your belief system?
Originally posted by bluewaterrider
Not so. Nor is it true that there is no empirical evidence to support my premise.Here is the first counterexample that comes to mind:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8172112
^This doesn't refute this:
Originally posted by Stealth Moose
But no belief system espoused by religion yields good things in people's lives and benefits society across the board. There is always discrimination, friction between religious ideas and progressive society, and a tribal "us versus them" mentality. In particular, the idea that non-believers are somehow morally bankrupt or defective is almost always a facet of major religions.
... Even slightly. It doesn't even directly address it. Shaky, shame on you for buying into his rhetoric.
But I think we're talking on different levels.
You're right. You seem to be talking everywhere but at me with all these unrelated sources and non-direct answers and fear-mongering over stealth-extremist Easter Bunny jihadists.
Originally posted by bluewaterrider
If anything, this [b]response of yours is a red herring.The Crusades were the work of the Roman Catholic Church.
I know the secular world considers Catholicism to be Christianity;
in reality it adheres about as much to what is actually written for Christians to follow as the Islamic faith you're comparing it to. [/B]
No, I brought it up specifically to showcase that Christians are capable of great evil too, in the name of doctrine and belief. Your 9/11 example is a ridiculously small sample of the second largest religion in the world. It's the kind of "OMG ARABS 911, LETS IGNORE ALL THE CRIMES PERPETUATED IN THE NAME OF CHRIST, ARABS ARABS" viewpoint that makes me want to say "Stop watching Fox News".
Also, LOL at Catholics not being Christians. When these acts took place, Catholics were about the only Christians in the world who had any power.
I'm short on time until the beginning of most people's typical workweek (i.e. Monday), so I hope you'll understand that I can only answer piecemeal and at random until then. Have patience.
If you can't define 'natural principles' in your next long-awaited reply, don't bother. You're just wasting my time.