Lovejoy
(No one uses logic in human relations, at least not consistently)
Speak for yourself, LJ.
(empirical data versus fairy tales is only relevant if they directly impact your perceptions, and in a fashion that corresponds with how you handle people.)
This is how empirical data works for me in regards to perceptions:
If I can't feel it, hear it, see it, taste it or touch it, it doesn't exist. If you can't demonstrate something to me, it isn't there. I can't perceive something that cannot be proven to exist, therefore how I handle people, how people handle themselves and whether or not it is in a fashion that corresponds is irrelevant.
Christians have an argument that they cannot prove (i.e. you can't prove the existence of supernatural forces, you can't prove the existence of heaven or hell, you don't have an original copy of the bible, etc.)
I can prove that there are no demons, there are no angels, there is no hell, simply because there is no evidence to support that there are. Like I said before, y'all can believe whatever you want, my problem is when Christians pass off unprovable beliefs as truth. It's like they're selling something they don't have. It's like playing poker against someone who constantly claims the plot but won't show their cards.
(why is your testimony more (or less) valid than someone that claims differently? The only time you "felt" born again? That is not logic, it is purely experiential. Which means that all testimony on that level is valid)
No, it means that I felt something that requires no more proof than to just look at things and demonstrate them for myself. Christians can't do anything like that, therefore their experiences aren't valid. You can't prove that god talks to anyone. You can't take an experience for which there are no demonstrable systems for proving it's validty and pass it off as truth. You can take what exists (empirical data), examine it, do some research and have a better look at the whole of the idea you're scrutinizing. That's empirical versus the fairy tale. I can do research and demonstrate it to someone else and then tell them to make up their own minds. Christians don't, and can't do that.
(You are incapable of stepping back and objectively viewing beliefs as a whole, because they are not objective, and cannot be viewed from the outside. Each one is a personal relationship. All you can do is emotionally distance yourself from something until it is easy to pass judgement on it, mostly by evaluating with your own perceptions)
Exactly, but no exactly. The first part, beliefs are not objective I agree, but I have ben viewing them from the outside. Each one is a personal relationship I suppose, but I'm challenging the existence of a relationship at all. And yes, when you want an objective opinion you do have to distance yourself emotionally so you don't become biased. I've read the bible and much christian literature. I've also read much literature challenging the bible and christian apologists. Then I evaluated it with my own perceptions. I took arguments from both sides, and without emotion, I evaluated what I had learned.
But if you're christian I doubt you'd understand this process.
(Your language, while occasionally trying to be friendly, comes across with quite an air of superiority and can be very provocative at times. Why is this? What are you trying to prove?)
No kidding sherlock. Like I ALREADY SAID BEFORE: I am both an observer and an agitator. When I observe something that bothers me, I agitate. That's my thing, that's what I do. I don't have to prove anything. Christians do a fine job disproving themselves through the absense of evidence, so my work is done for me. Like I said, I'm an observer. I'm an empiricist. If you can't prove it, it don't exist. Talking to god does not mean it listens. Believing in heaven doesn't mean it's there. Having a book that says there's a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow doesn't mean it's there, and pardon me if I find something wrong with people passing off the unprovable as indisputable.
(And please, attacking a supernatural belief system with the evidence of nature my seem like a good idea, but it will get you nowhere. Particularly when you don't seem to have the background to do it well.)
I'll be the judge of that. Oh, and what kind of background do I have to have in order to possess a valid opinion?
(Do you claim (as some do) that there is an inherent danger to people holding Christian beliefs? Are you going to attack every group that holds a different set of beliefs or values?)
As I ALREADY SAID: I don't have a problem with christianity when taken as a discipline to live YOUR life by, but as a standard by which to judge those who aren't convinced? Poppycock. When it's shoved in my face by Aimiel as though it's rock solid and I'm going to go to hell, yeah, I attack. Granted, I picked the fight, but he didn't have to take the bait. Christians love a challenge, and after twenty years of christianity, I love challenges also. Christianity is where I got my hostility, my intolerance and my love of a fight.
As for forgiveness, I'm glad you've got some Lovejoy, 'cuz I'm plain plum outta the stuff.
And Wickwoman....
right on.