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TallyMan
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06 Sep 2014, 4:59 pm

^ If you are here to debate religion, fine, that is what this forum is for. If you are here to preach at us, you'll get a cold reception.


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06 Sep 2014, 5:11 pm

What personal attacks are you talking about Lyra?


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0_equals_true
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06 Sep 2014, 5:27 pm

freedom against being offended -- not a human right

I'm not aware of any personal attacks against LyraLuthTinu.



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06 Sep 2014, 5:35 pm

^Lyrs mentioned personal attacks toward the OP in page one of the thread.


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Misslizard
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06 Sep 2014, 5:35 pm

Image


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MJPIndy
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06 Sep 2014, 6:04 pm

LyraLuthTinu wrote:
Reading the rest of the thread, I see wp is typical of the world wide web in that it feels Biblical Christianity and Young Earth Creationism are the only beliefs that are intolerable.

[...]Science only discredits creation and young earth if you view it from a pre-conceived evolutionary, cosomological (the universe is all that there is all that there was and all that there ever will be), big bang and/or uniformitarianist paradigm. If you begin from a mindset of believing in the spiritual, in the word of God, and the accuracy of the Creation and Deluge stories, the data still all makes sense; it just points to a different reality.

[...]

I look at the data from a different angle than the rest of you. The angle of God created the world, we are all spiritual beings not just animals, and the deluge shaped the geographical features of the globe not billions of years of natural forces.


This (recent?) self-description of YEC puzzles me. It seems like nothing but unabashed relativism. ("My conclusions are true for me because they're consistent with my ultimate principles; my ultimate principles, like anyone's, are embraced through an arbitrary choice that is immune to criticism.") Yet religious literalists have often expressed deep misgivings with relativism, and argued that secularism leads to a fearsome and terrible relativism.

It seems to me a consequence of your implicit relativism that the angle from which you claim to look is not binding on anyone else; it is not the case that there is an objective, non-perspectival standard of rationality that obligates us to interpret the world the way you do. You do not have a claim to absolute truth (a concept that relativism rejects), and you certainly don't think that anyone who rejects your perspective has a claim to absolute truth. We are not in any weighty, authoritative sense required to accept YEC, and we cannot be faulted for rejecting YEC.

If this is in line with your way of thought - and if you recognize that most scientists consider the unique particulars of your scientific worldview to be certainly false, and that their doing so is perfectly consistent with their methods and evidence - then I admit it doesn't seem to me refutable (relativism is perhaps of dubious consistency, but perhaps you can adopt different standards of consistency); I do, however, doubt that it's particularly honest. I would think that a consciously embraced relativism would foster a painful sense of just how arbitrary and unfounded the relativist's values and opinions are, and diminish his/her sense of propriety in submitting his/her beliefs for others' reflective consideration. Maybe the relation is more psychological than logical, but it seems that religious literalism tends to require naïve, dogmatic certitude rather than a self-conscious relativism.

I don't mean for my post to be anything but a series of philosophical/psychological observations, by the way. Sorry if it comes across as needlessly hostile.



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06 Sep 2014, 6:10 pm

Quote:
2. Personal attacks.
This includes insinuation, ridicule and personal insults, regardless of whether direct or indirect. Attacking an opinion, belief or philosophy is acceptable, but attacking the person making the comments is not.


I checked the first page and saw no personal attacks. I've read through the entire thread and don't remember seeing anything that made me think, 'Hey, that's taking it a little too far!'

I can understand why someone would feel hurt if their belief system was ridiculed, but that doesn't count as a 'personal attack'.



Last edited by ReticentJaeger on 06 Sep 2014, 6:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.

adifferentname
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06 Sep 2014, 6:12 pm

LyraLuthTinu wrote:
Thank you for revealing how WP treats people of a certain religious group.


The majority of unfounded claims tend to face scrutiny in PPR. Why should yours be any different?

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One which is becoming universally hated, especially on the internet.


Not WP's fault, nor is it WP's responsibility.

Quote:
Reading the rest of the thread, I see wp is typical of the world wide web in that it feels Biblical Christianity and Young Earth Creationism are the only beliefs that are intolerable.


Even if this were true - which it demonstrably is not - those of us who do not share your views are under no obligation to accept them.

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Thanks a lot. I feel less welcome here now than I did when I first decided to join.


Appeals to emotion do not constitute a valid argument. You are not being excluded from posting, whatever your feelings might be.

Quote:
Science only discredits creation and young earth if you view it from a pre-conceived evolutionary, cosomological (the universe is all that there is all that there was and all that there ever will be), big bang and/or uniformitarianist paradigm. If you begin from a mindset of believing in the spiritual, in the word of God, and the accuracy of the Creation and Deluge stories, the data still all makes sense; it just points to a different reality.


It certainly doesn't point to this one.

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Yes, I read Ken Ham's Answers in Genesis magazine and the Creation Ministries International magazine. No, that does not make me an ignorant, unscientific, uneducated moron.


No, but agreeing with Ken Ham probably does.

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It just means I look at the data from a different angle than the rest of you. The angle of God created the world, we are all spiritual beings not just animals, and the deluge shaped the geographical features of the globe not billions of years of natural forces.


AKA the unscientific angle.

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I'm sorry to discover that Wrong Planet treats believers this way. I've seen the thread about how WP treats females. Now I feel even more marginalised.


Another appeal to emotion, this time followed up with shameless playing of the victim card.

Quote:
I hope y'all find a way to respect beliefs that you disagree with. I hope I don't have to stay out of the politics, philosophy and religion sub-forum. I hope people can listen to different ideas without resorting to personal attacks like the ones leveled against the OP on the first page of this thread.


I hope your next post includes something resembling a cogent argument. This one consists entirely of logical fallacies.

Speaking of which:

Quote:
But after ten years on the internet I have my doubts. People on the web can be like vicious thought-police to people with politically incorrect, minority viewpoints that line up with Biblical teaching. Sometimes it seems like everyone online takes their marching orders from the Huffington Post. :cry:



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06 Sep 2014, 7:23 pm

LyraLuthTinu wrote:
I hope y'all find a way to respect beliefs that you disagree with.


I too look forward to the day when fundamentalist Christians quit trying to force their beliefs on us. I also look forward to the day when fundamentalist Christians quit trying to legislate their beliefs into law.



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06 Sep 2014, 7:32 pm

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Thank you for revealing how WP treats people of a certain religious group. One which is becoming universally hated, especially on the internet


Last time I checked the number, 73% of Americans identify as Christian and 85% of the senate and congress identify as Christian.
Quit trying to play the persecuted minority card. Its a very transparent and a factually wrong argument.



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06 Sep 2014, 7:43 pm

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guCku3_pK7Q[/youtube]


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drh1138
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06 Sep 2014, 7:43 pm

LyraLuthTinu wrote:
It just means I look at the data from a different angle than the rest of you. The angle of God created the world, we are all spiritual beings not just animals, and the deluge shaped the geographical features of the globe not billions of years of natural forces.


Quote:
No, that does not make me an ignorant, unscientific, uneducated moron.


...sure thing. :lol:



Last edited by drh1138 on 06 Sep 2014, 7:47 pm, edited 1 time in total.

LoveNotHate
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06 Sep 2014, 7:46 pm

LyraLuthTinu wrote:
Reading the rest of the thread, I see wp is typical of the world wide web in that it feels Biblical Christianity and Young Earth Creationism are the only beliefs that are intolerable.


Yes, people on WP have actually told me that science has proven GOD does not exist. :) How tragic that science does this to people - to make them develop false conclusions.

I even showed the wikipage for the concept of cosmological "fine-tuning" which is used by religious philosophers in debates as the strongest evidence of creationism:

Wikipedia: "Physicist Paul Davies has asserted that 'There is now broad agreement among physicists and cosmologists that the Universe is in several respects ?fine-tuned' for life' ....".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fine-tuned_Universe

However, upon reading this science evidence, people were confused, how could science have evidence for 'fine-tuning'? Science is suppose to be this religion that proves GOD does not exist. So, they insulted me, told me I was "quoting out of context" and other nonsense, when in fact I am quoting right from the top of the wiki page and quoting the prevailing scientific theory. That shows you how science closes off minds and how only science that supports "no GOD" is "good science" and any science that is evidence for GOD is "bad science".



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06 Sep 2014, 7:58 pm

aghogday wrote:
I'm not here to make you drink any water or criticize your grammar. But, I'm sure one of the English teachers here will accommodate part of that request on demand, if you like.

Nope. As a teacher of literacy, I'm more concerned with what someone is saying than correcting their grammar. And in making points meself, I'll often care more about the point than me own spelling or grammer. :wink:


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06 Sep 2014, 8:19 pm

LyraLuthTinu wrote:
Thank you for revealing how WP treats people of a certain religious group.

Let's flip it around. Religious people come here and make statements that exclude us non-religious (or ex-religious or other-religious) types. Stating that Jesus is Lord is a grand way to get the heckles up. Telling people that our bias is due to anything other than what it really stems from is making grand assumptions - and nobody likes assumptions being made about them, especially when they're totally wrong. And lastly, when religious people come here and tell us, covertly or overtly, that we will be judged, is making a judgement about us in and of itself.

You may think the same about us non-religious types, but it's pot-kettle with the truth.

If the religious here don't wish to provoke an adverse reaction, then don't make absolute statements. I defend your right to your beliefs, as much as I defend the rights of the non-religious or the other-religious. And I also defend the right for us all to have an argument, even if/when emotions come into it. We are both logical and emotional beasties.

hmmm.. reminds me of the Monty Python sketch...
- "Is this the room for an argument?"
- "No, this is abuse. Argument is down the hall."


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BritAspie
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06 Sep 2014, 8:20 pm

One day the tide will turn and the flock of the slave "god" yaweh will realise who he really is and will over throw him and Satan will rule

Ave Satanas Rex!