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| Philosophy General philosophy: metaphysics, ethics, the Enlightenment, and the human experience. |
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#16 (permalink) | |||||
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~~~~~~~~~
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Gator Country, FL, USA
Posts: 4,068
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Re: The relation of atheism to fatalism
Kindest Regards, Jaiket and others!
Hopefully I can begin to touch on some of this, but I see this going a long way before it ends. I only have a few minutes... Quote:
Which I find quite curious, why hunter-gatherers locked in the depths of an ice age struggling to kill their next meal find the time and make the effort to seek for "god." Logically, it is a frivolous waste of precious time and precious energy if there is nothing to it, if there is nothing to be gained. Random superstition is an inadequate answer, the pursuit of "god" is commonplace in every culture from antiquity, there are no ancient atheist cultures. Or at least, so it seems from the artifacts found. And if it is an hallucination (or some other like "mental" problem), then it is again uniformly distributed and comprises a very real part of our genetic make-up. Ergo, we are all insane, genetically, if the pervasiveness of the search for "god" is hallucinogenic or superstitious. (which begs the reference to the soapbox stander who cries out "the world is crazy! I'm the only sane one left!) The search for "god" is far too complex an issue to be arrived at spuriously, and at a time in human development when frivolous effort was a luxury ill afforded. In short, there is too much circumstantial evidence to indicate a pervasive search for "god," at a time when frivolous and fraudulent effort was not practical and likely not well tolerated. Quote:
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This too, is not explained well enough to my satisfaction, and in an effort to hurry I apologize if anything written seems insensitive. That is not the spirit or intent behind it. It is merely my personal observations. |
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#17 (permalink) | |
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Mind or spirit?
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Solihull, UK
Posts: 221
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Re: The relation of atheism to fatalism
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I think it is our natural capacity (and need) to care and to some extent love others, that establishes a 'natural' sense of morality. I think this is the way that religious and cultural morality arose in the first place. One may object by looking at primitive cultures where all sorts of abominations occurred like human sacrifices, but I think to a great extent it is the relative cultural reference that distorts and changes what is acceptable and what isn't. If we look at our modern world, isn't it still perfectly acceptable to kill in a war in the name of god and country? The problem with human beings is the duality of love and selfishness, the fact than we can hurt others does not impede that we can be hurt too. So the wise understood the problem and came up with laws and morals to control human destructiveness and emphasize wherever possible the constructive qualities. Otherwise you cannot build and order any society. We intuitively know what is right and what isn't, nobody points a finger at a soldier that killed in war, yet how many soldiers end up severely traumatised and psychologically handicapped for life? this illustrates that if we harm others we may end up harming ourselves, this is the ultimate source of morality imo. By protecting others we protect ourselves, why? because we are able to love. |
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#18 (permalink) |
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Freethinker
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Colorado Springs, Colorado
Posts: 918
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Re: The relation of atheism to fatalism
I would hazard a guess, that when it is all said and done it really depends on what part of the elephant you have a grasp of. As Jaiket has opened the possibilty of agnosticism over atheism ( a position I find more readily defendable in a logical sense) we have at least the lofty position of the beginners mind working for us.
Even if all the orthodox ideas of God, the Universe and Everything are eschewed are we not still left with, as Suzuki always said "Things as it is?" My point is that we can resolve all the gaps in our diverse philosophies and patch things together enough to be believable and still not have it all together. For example, if an atheist holds to a model of human beings being connected in a neural network or collective unconscious then ethics would come naturally because we wouldn't want to do harm to the species in any way. This wouldn't equate the necessity for a God at all,even seen from the perspective of the scientific or mechanistic view of Man-as-Machine. This would explain Cai's view of the "in-built" morals. Ultimately we are probably made of the same substance that the rest of the universe is made of, and therefore share in the same qualities as it is, it is these qualities that are the area of contention for many of us. Call it God, or merely Suchness and we can disagree, but does our contention negate what merely "is" ? Peace Mark |
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#20 (permalink) | ||||||
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~~~~~~~~~
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Gator Country, FL, USA
Posts: 4,068
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Re: The relation of atheism to fatalism
Kindest Regards, Caimanson!
Apologies for the delay in responding. The last few days have been a bit hectic to say the least. Quote:
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To carry this into a neolithic or paleolithic setting, one might not have time for reflection. Life would seem to me to be consumed in action and reaction. When one wasn't foraging for plants, stalking the next game animal or chipping stones into arrow or spearheads, one was dodging arrows slung by competing tribes or escaping from other predators (lions, tigers and bears, OH MY!). The amount of time that could be devoted to "leisure" must have been very limited, and the entire concept of leisure would have entailed far different things than we imagine anyway (no tv, radio, movies, ball games, books, etc). Likely what leisure time was available was spent star gazing and story telling. Out of star gazing and story telling somehow developed a need to paint on cave walls for more than mere decoration, and to carve figurines for more than mere idle time wasters and knick-knacks. In short, somebody realized the concept of sympathetic magic, and that it *works (ed)*. As a Christian I obviously find the concept of magic to be somewhat unappealing, yet I cannot deny that prayer is an appeal for a spiritual intervention no different than painting a hopeful scene of a hunt as an appeal for a successful hunt by sympathetic magic. Quote:
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#21 (permalink) | ||||||
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~~~~~~~~~
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Gator Country, FL, USA
Posts: 4,068
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Re: The relation of atheism to fatalism
Kindest Regards, Paladin!
Ah, the philosopher at work! Quote:
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#22 (permalink) |
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~~~~~~~~~
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Gator Country, FL, USA
Posts: 4,068
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Re: The relation of atheism to fatalism
Kindest Regards, Jaiket!
I don't think they've found a morality gene yet. Although what you are alluding to seems to fall more in the realm, if I understand correctly, of "epigenetics." |
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#23 (permalink) | |
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Mind or spirit?
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Solihull, UK
Posts: 221
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Re: The relation of atheism to fatalism
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Gosh, just thought of the 'civilised' baby disposal by the Spartans. There is also the issue of "us and them" at a natural level, the pack / herd / tribe does not necessarily extend moral courtesy to others of the same species if they are "outsiders." (In much the same way, I would think, that "we" foster the sense that the enemy is an "other" during wartime propaganda.) In other words, a "foreign" ape, for example, is quite likely to be ripped to shreds by a tribe of similar apes. Agree completely, but hey I never suggested that human morality was the same as a mystical or enlightened love! I like the observation about the "duality of love and selfishness" concept. I'm not sure I follow how "the wise" would understand and utilize to the benefit of society...it almost implies an outside / alien influence (hand of G-d, as it were). How does it fit with the understanding of the development of cultural anthrolopogy and prehistoric religious development? What I mean is that gradually, the rulers and leaders of those primitive societies realised that it was convenient to have these laws and morals. Partly out of awareness and partly out of pragmatism, for the preservation of the group and perhaps to increase their power and control. And I don't think it is any different today for small or big groups of any kind. Just my opinion. Of course there is also room for those early religious people that through their spiritual experiences had "revelation" of what is good. Those people probably had more time to stand back and reflect than the average ruler.That is the interesting thing for me, what kind of morals are we talking about, the selfless unconditional love of the mystic, or the more down to earth sense of what is good? |
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#24 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Edmonds, WA USA
Posts: 33
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Re: The relation of atheism to fatalism
I'm ready to be persuaded that my life is one of fatalism and despair if someone can actually provide proof.
I have never been convinced by the arguments for the idea of determinism in individual human behavior, so fatalism is out. I have more than enough hope and joy in my life to counteract the moments of despair. And while it's a historical fact that most people have exhibited behavior that can rightly be called religious, the aditional historical fact of "fundamentalist" atheists, who completely reject any claim of supernatural beings and still live lives of meaning and joy, also cannot be ignored by anyone of integrity. Now what? |
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#25 (permalink) | |
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Fellowship of Reason
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 148
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Re: The relation of atheism to fatalism
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I am an atheist, and I do not despair. While I do not wish to die just yet, I can die knowing that I have had the marvelous experience of being alive. I don't believe my past existence is erased by my death any more than it is erased by each new conscious moment -- it will have happened, and that is enough. eudaimonia, Mark |
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#26 (permalink) |
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Token Atheist
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Tropics of Scotland
Posts: 138
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Re: The relation of atheism to fatalism
I don't think a morality gene is likely to be found. Genes that program/influence human minds to percieve cheating, killing tribe members, etc as 'bad' may have been selected for, in the same sense that genes that encourage staying put while predators abound would be selected against. Something relatively simple like that strikes me as likely.
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#27 (permalink) | |
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Token Atheist
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Tropics of Scotland
Posts: 138
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Re: The relation of atheism to fatalism
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In case anyone misunderstood and read the question differently. |
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#28 (permalink) |
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~~~~~~~~~
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Gator Country, FL, USA
Posts: 4,068
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Re: The relation of atheism to fatalism
Ah, Liberty,
Perhaps you are not a drive by after all...of course it remains to be seen, considering previous tactics. Somehow I doubt proof would convince you, by your previous example. That of baiting for an answer, and then ignoring that answer after it is given. Can't say you didn't see it, I caught you reading it myself. You know, the reply in the "Word of G-d" thread (and follow on in the Aristotle / Aquinas thread)...for which I am still awaiting a response. Such carefree abuse of the manners of debate make it uninteresting to continue... Perhaps if you would indulge a person by actually responding to their hard, probing questions, there might be some inducement to continue. Otherwise, what sense in a one-sided discussion? |
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#29 (permalink) | |||||||
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~~~~~~~~~
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Gator Country, FL, USA
Posts: 4,068
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Re: The relation of atheism to fatalism
Kindest Regards, Caimanson!
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Prior to this, during pre-historic time (before writing), we can only guess by various artifacts. So while your points about power, pragmatism and preservation are pretty well founded by *historic" bases, it is conjecture when applied to pre-history. And I think, if we can use shamanic and tribal examples from today as any kind of corollary, that this is a very western view that is foreign to the tribal social structures of pre-history. Not counting, what effect did agriculture have on the human psyche? Grain is *not* a normal diet, evolutionarily speaking, for humans. So it is justifiable to hold the neolithic mind to a different standard than our own. Having said this, it is still quite curious why the extended and uniform effort to reach towards some Divine element, if no Divine element exists? Quote:
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Kindest Regards, Eudaimonist! Quote:
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#30 (permalink) | |
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General Member
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Kentucky, USA
Posts: 469
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Re: The relation of atheism to fatalism
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Originally Posted by JosephM It seems to me the logical consequence of atheism is not believing in God. That's about it. Life goes on either way. Some people arrive at despair regardless of their declared belief. One cannot know God anyway except he/she is awakened to reality. Its not exactly something you can force on people. Just some thoughts to consider. Quote:
Love in Christ, JM Last edited by JosephM : 12-07-2006 at 07:29 PM. Reason: added 5th sentence. |
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