Scrimshaw wrote:
That's right, if atheism is true, squashing people should no different than squashing ants.
Well, believing in God never stopped people from exterminating people like insects. Sure -- it stopped SOME people from exterminating others like insects, but for the most part, God and religion seem to be one of the more often used excuses for mass exterminations. Take a look at history. The hebrews massacred dozens of tribes in the old testament. The 4th and 5th century Chrsitians massacred each other's sects over doctrine and heresy. Then they massacred muslims (according to their own accounts, the streets of Jerusalem were knee-deep in the blood of Muslims).
So what's the difference? Humans will kill for whatever reasons they seek to justify. God or no god.
Afterall, if there is no absolute standard of morality, who would you be to tell someone else they can't view ants and humans equally and kill them both??
But what's stopping you from defending yourself from people who think you're an insect? If you have the firepower, YOU HAVE THE RIGHT. In the world of ultimate reality, MIGHT DOES MAKE RIGHT. He who has the guns (or other firepower) makes the rules. That's the way it's always been.
Actually, it would be meaningless right now as well.
You forget one thing. We are humans. We seek to create meaning where there is none. It is in our nature to seek out patterns in our world, and create a meaning for it. If you do not think there is meaning in something, someone else will make a meaning. Even atheists do this. Seeking meaning and creating meaning is what humans of all cultures do. It's simply our nature.
No, but if atheism was true, it certainly makes arguing and debating and caring about what other people think - futile and utterly pointless.
No it doesn't. Humans care, whether or not they believe in gods. Caring is a fundamental and universal part of the human experience. If you are human, you have emotions, and that means that you care about something. It may not be exactly what another person cares for, but the fact is that we all do it.
If you care about your survival, it logically follows that you will do some things in order to survive -- even care what other people think. Because humans are social animals, and have an emotional need to connect with other people, we have an innate tendency to care about what other people think. We don't have to -- there is no law that compells us with hellfire and eternal torment. But we have no control over it, we just do it. We care about each other because we have instincts that drive our nature.
If I truly believed that atheism was true and believed that my pathetical speck of life was all I had before my existence would be terminated into the meaningless sea of eternity, I wouldn't waste one second of my life arguing or debating about anything, because if no God exists, then truth, lies, perception, thoughts, experiences - EVERYTHING would be relative and no one would have the right to tell anyone else how to think, live, or behave.
I'm not going to psychoanalyze you based on how you apparently see yourself as a pathetic speck, but If you believed what actual atheists believe, instead of the bizarre straw-man version that you present here, you would not consider your life to be pathetic.
Why do you think your life is a pathetic speck? I don't. I think my life is special, no matter how crappy a day I've had. Not EVERYTHING is relative. Just things that involve OPINION. The fact that a rock is hard, and water is wet are things that people never bother to argue about, because we all experience them in virtually the same way in any context. Morality, justice, happiness, spirituality, and political beliefs are all relative. It would be very nice if morality and "truth" were as universally understood by all people as "hard", "soft", "wet", and "tree" were, but they're not. Those things are the realm of subjective opinion.
Therefore, what would be the point of arguing? Afterall, there would be no such thing as absolute truth; just a lot of relativistic opinions and none more "valuable" than any other.
Well, there is no absolute truth -- the failure of religionists to demonstrate an absolute truth sort of suggests it strongly. But even if there is no absolute truth, we are HUMAN. We seek to understand and seek patterns. Understanding things makes us feel comfortable. Arguing truth with one another is a way we try to understand each other -- unless of course, you're a preacher who is trying to eliminate all arguments through the force of his personality.
That's fine that you disagree, but what does it matter? You can disagree until you are blue in the face, but you have not proffered a single statement that resolved any my questions. If you are honest, you'd admit that atheism simply has no end game. It is a belief system that leads to total meaninglessness, relativism, futility, and absurdity.
Atheism has no "end game", whatever that is. It's not a game. It's not a "belief system"; it's just a single belief. It's simply not believing in supernatural explanations and/or gods. it doesn't lead to meaninglessness, because humans naturally seek out meaning and create meaning if none exists. It only leads to moral/spiritual/political reletivism -- which, by the way, is exactly what society is like in the real world. Each of us has their own viewpoint. Atheism does not lead to scientific reletivism, logical reletivism, rational reletivism, or a reletivistic view of reality in general. Atheism only leads to futility and absurdity if you are a futilistic, absurdist person.
But humans themselves wouldn't matter. There would be no objective standard that would give meaning to humans.
Is it important that an objective standard exists for humans to find meaning? Why can't we all find our own individual meanings by whatever standard we happen to develop as we live and grow? Does there need to be a universalyl accepted "meaning" to everyone's life? Is there something inherently wrong about everyone having their own unique idea of meaning?
I say humans still matter, despite the fact that there is no god. Humans matter each other, because WE ARE HUMAN. It is in our nature to seek social contact with other humans. It is in our nature to communicate, seek companionship, and find meaning. People matter because people are human. Call it a tautology -- it is. Humans have innate instincts to care for other humans, therefore, humans care about other humans. Is it too simple to see that?
And what "matters" to meaningless things (like humans) would be irrelevant because the things themselves are inherently meaningless. An inherently meaningless thing cannot assign meaning to itself.
Not unless, of course, it has a thinking, analyzing, pattern-seeking brain that tries to find and/or create meanings, even if there are none. Humans, even if there is no real intrinsic, universal, absolute meaning to anything, will assign meaning to whatever they want, because it's what their minds are naturally inclined to do. Why bother fighting it? Enjoy it. It's part of being human.
And if humans have to create their own meaning out of thin air, how is that any different than creating the idea of God out of thin air? Indeed, if atheism is true, any meaning we assign to ourselves would be just as "imaginary" as any God.
BINGO! What we think, dream, imagine, create, etc., with our imagination has meaning TO US. I may not enjoy the creations of your mind, but I enjoy my own. Sometimes, our own individual ideas are all we have; sometimes we cannot share them with others. What goes on in our head -- apart from the chemical reactions that make things happen -- is an imaginary process -- it's illusory. Thoughts are imaginations.
Human life would have value? What "value"? OH!! You mean the *imaginary* value that you would arbitrarily assign to it.
I don't think that humans give "arbitrary" values to anything. We clearly operate on genetically assigned components, socially-assigned components, and circumstantial components. Whatever values we assign are going to follow some very predictable, expectable, patterns. All humans have the same machinery inside of their brains, and we therefore tend to place values on things along the same lines.
I see........so as an atheist, you believe it's okay for people to believe in imaginary values, but not okay to believe in imaginary gods. Makes perfect sense.
I have no problem with a diversity of values. I have no problem with a diversity of beliefs. It is only when those who lack an appreciation for diversity, and try to impose a universal, absolute standard on everyone else that I have a problem.