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| Belief and Spirituality General thinking beyond the boundaries of religion and organised belief |
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#1 (permalink) |
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UNeyeR1
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Maryland
Posts: 5,649
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Is naturalism just another name for atheism?
Are there a variety of atheistic belief systems and naturalism is just another one?
A friend recommended I look at www.naturalism.org and I was surprised (from what I know of her) that she indicated that this thought spoke to her so thoroughly... |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Prince Of Truth
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Silicon Valley
Posts: 263
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Re: Is naturalism just another name for atheism?
I describe myself a Naturalist. To me Nature IS God
. But unlike atheists I do not believe that Nature is limited to Its laws of Nature and I do believe it has conscious (the source of all consciousness). It can do anything It wants but choses to enforce Its laws for a reason we may never know (atleast anytime soon). This would mean Nature is Omnipresent, Omniscient, and Omnipotent.Atheism in many ways does not exist. Unless by atheist you mean denying the existence of a God, then we are all atheists in a sense. Atheists believe in Nature and yet they deny it isn't a God. Why is this? Because atheists are offended and have something against the term God. When most atheists think of God they think of the stereotypical Christian white man God with a long beard sitting on a throne in a different realm taking tabs on what people do . God does not have to be this primitive. |
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#3 (permalink) | |
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What was the question?
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Maryland
Posts: 7,477
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Re: Is naturalism just another name for atheism?
Quote:
v/r Q |
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#4 (permalink) | |
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UNeyeR1
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Maryland
Posts: 5,649
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Re: Is naturalism just another name for atheism?
Quote:
I hear you in relation to nature being the three O's and Q, my favorite quote.."naturalism doubts the existence of ultimate purposes either inherent in nature or imposed by a creator" 'doubt' the existence.... I get the feeling that once science proves it, it will be accepted...until then we wait... From their site...the Five Tenets of Naturalism What exists: This version of naturalism, what might be called inclusive naturalism, asserts that the world is of a piece; that everything we are and do is included in the material continuum whose most basic elements are those described by physics. We are the evolved products of natural selection, which operates without foresight or purpose. Nothing about us escapes being included in the physical universe, or escapes being shaped by the various processes – physical, biological, psychological, and social – that science describes. There exist no immaterial souls, spirits, mental essences, or disembodied selves which stand apart from the physical world. What constitutes knowledge: Naturalism as a world view is based on the premise that knowledge about what exists and about how things work is best achieved through the sciences, not personal revelation or religious tradition. The knowledge we have of ourselves and our place in nature is the achievement of a collective effort to construct a consistent view of the world that permits prediction and control. This effort proceeds by experiment and rational inquiry, and the knowledge gained is always subject to further testing as understanding matures. Wanting something to be true, or having the intense personal conviction that something is true, are never grounds for supposing that it is true. Scientific empiricism has the necessary consequence of unifying our knowledge of the world, of placing all objects of understanding within a single, overarching causal context. Under naturalism, there is just one, inclusive world in which phenomena arise. The causal view: From a naturalistic perspective, there are no causally privileged agents, nothing that causes without being caused in turn. Human beings act the way they do because of the various influences that shape them, whether these be biological or social, genetic or environmental. We do not have the capacity to act outside the causal connections that link us in every respect to the rest of the world. This means we do not have what many people call free will, the ability to cause our behavior without being fully caused in turn. The self: As strictly physical beings, we don’t exist as immaterial selves, either mental or spiritual, that control behavior. Thought, desires, intentions, feelings, and actions all arise on their own without the benefit of a supervisory self, and they are all the products of a physical system, the brain and the body. The self is constituted by more or less consistent sets of personal characteristics, beliefs, and actions, but it doesn’t exist apart from those complex physical processes that make up the individual. It may strongly seem as if there is a self sitting behind experience, witnessing it, and behind behavior, controlling it, but this impression is strongly disconfirmed by a scientific understanding of human behavior. Responsibility and morality: From a naturalistic perspective, behavior arises out of the interaction between individuals with their environment, not from a freely willing self that produces behavior independently of causal connections (see above). Therefore individuals don’t bear originative responsibility for their actions, in the sense of being their first cause. Given the circumstances both inside and outside the body, they couldn’t have done other than what they did. Nevertheless, we still hold individuals responsible, in the sense of applying rewards and sanctions, so that their behavior stays more or less within the range of what we deem acceptable. This is how people learn to act ethically. Naturalism doesn’t undermine the need or possibility of responsibility and morality, but it places them within the world as understood by science. However, naturalism does call into question the basis for retributive attitudes, namely the idea that individuals could have done otherwise in the situation in which their behavior arose. The source of value: Because naturalism doubts the existence of ultimate purposes either inherent in nature or imposed by a creator, values derive from human desires and preferences, not discoverable absolutes. To the extent that there is a shared human nature, values are common across cultures, but to the extent cultures differ, so will values. There is no finally correct way to behave, nor are there finally justifiable goals, but only the desires and intentions that currently constitute us, all of which may change as human nature and cultures change. Although values do not have a foundation outside ourselves, we cannot escape having them, since they constitute us as motivated creatures. |
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#5 (permalink) | |
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Wannabe Farmer
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Earth
Posts: 2,076
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Re: Is naturalism just another name for atheism?
Quote:
As for Naturalism... well, I started reading the intellectual quotes from the site and got bored. I guess Naturalism doesn't resonate with me. Is it Atheism? I don't know, I lost interest in it before I could form an opinion. ![]() |
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#6 (permalink) | |
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Where is my mind?
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Middlesbrough, UK
Posts: 602
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Re: Is naturalism just another name for atheism?
Many religious people categorize Atheism as a single belief structure all on its own, but I challenge that view.
I am a religious person, a Buddhist. I am also an Atheist as I do not believe in God. I think this demonstrates quite well that a person can be Atheist but still believe in something, like naturalism for example. So I would say that, no, Naturalism is not another name for Atheism, but it can be a subset of Atheism, just like Christianity is not just another name for Monotheism, but it is a subset of Monotheism Quote:
It is like me saying that no matter what you achieve, it is all down to me, secretly working behind the scenes to help you out. I secretly helped you get your degree, score the winning goal, run the marathon, save your marriage, it was all me, you could never have done any of it on your own. That is how I feel about God. Peace ATF |
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#7 (permalink) | |
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Wannabe Farmer
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Earth
Posts: 2,076
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Re: Is naturalism just another name for atheism?
Quote:
That's a valid feeling; however, I feel like the Judeo-Christian, or external, idea of God is limited. What about a more inclusive idea of God, where all beings are interconnected and inter-be as (part of) God? Isn't this doctrine found in Buddhism? Of course, if you take the approach that Buddhism is an atheistic religion--which seems like an oxymoron to me, but I understand what you are saying and that atheism is a stance taken by many Buddhists--the doctrine would substitute the word Nirvana, perhaps, instead of God. Yet even in Buddhism, which does place emphasis on individual effort, it is recognized that none of us are isolated or lone individuals working for enlightenment; it's all interconnected and we all inter-be together. So, while we can make individual effort, we really can't do much on our own, strictly speaking. ![]() |
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#8 (permalink) | |
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What was the question?
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Maryland
Posts: 7,477
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Re: Is naturalism just another name for atheism?
Quote:
v/r Q |
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#9 (permalink) | |
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UNeyeR1
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Maryland
Posts: 5,649
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Re: Is naturalism just another name for atheism?
Quote:
I thought Buddhists were not athiests, they just didn't see the need to spend the time discussing, contemplating the nature or existence of G-d. |
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#10 (permalink) | ||
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Token Atheist
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Tropics of Scotland
Posts: 138
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Re: Is naturalism just another name for atheism?
Quote:
Quote:
Out of curiosity, is your nature-is-god belief not better characterised as pantheism? |
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#11 (permalink) | |
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What was the question?
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Maryland
Posts: 7,477
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Re: Is naturalism just another name for atheism?
Quote:
What is the Sunday school part? v/r Q |
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#12 (permalink) | |
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UNeyeR1
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Maryland
Posts: 5,649
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Re: Is naturalism just another name for atheism?
Quote:
In Sunday School we get this larger than life humanistic view of the anthropormorphic G-d, mirroring Santa Claus in a lot of ways...big white guy with the beard sitting on top of the world keeping naughty and nice lists, dispensing gifts and good or coal, floods or plagues as the need arises... it is a beginning, a foundation, they don't think we are capable of understanding concepts of spirit or all encompassing thought...so we get almost cartoon versions... as we grow our understanding grows, yes? However those that leave Abrahamic religions and head for friendlier shores prior to seeing the entire painting develop still feel that our G-d is more akin to Zeus sitting up on a throne... |
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#13 (permalink) |
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Tree Hugger
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: UK
Posts: 15
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Re: Is naturalism just another name for atheism?
I too am not offended by the idea of God or the term, it's merely I don't use it in the same way as those who profess a belief in the supernatural. God to me is the natural world, it's the loving impulse, it's fairness and compassion, it's empathy, it's loving kindness.
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#14 (permalink) | |
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Fellowship of Reason
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 148
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Re: Is naturalism just another name for atheism?
Quote:
I personally regard myself as a naturalist in metaphysics, although unlike many naturalists I think that human individuals have a form of freewill, which places me diametrically opposite the anti-freewill thrust of that website. My views on ethical philosophy differ greatly from what is mentioned at the site, and so I call myself a Eudaimonist after my ethics, rather than a naturalist. eudaimonia, Mark |
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#15 (permalink) | |
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Fellowship of Reason
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 148
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Re: Is naturalism just another name for atheism?
Quote:
I do not believe in Nature. I believe in nature. You see Nature as having consciousness, desires, intentions, will, power, etc, and as omnipresent, onniscient, and omnipotent. It is easy to see how you would think of Nature as a God. Nature's resume is thick with Godliness. If Nature went to a job interview for godlike beings, Nature would be hired in an instant. I see nature (the universe as a whole) as mindless, desireless, intentionless, will-less, etc, and therefore as completely devoid of such qualities as omnipresence, omniscience, and omnipotence. My "nature" wouldn't even get an interview. Is it easier to see now why I don't view "nature" (the universe) as anything like a God? eudaimonia, Mark |
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