Greta wrote:By "grown up" I mean possessing an adult's ability to rise above base emotionalism - not an Übermensch, just a regular, flawed adult who has learned a little self discipline. I gather that she probably had an argument with an animal rights person, was thoroughly pwned, and is now neurotically perseverating.Yes, I see. I think in the context of this place, that would mean the ability to argue rationally and to fairly assess the validity, or otherwise, of another person's point of view, but not to the extent of acting like a robot who is simply logically processing information. It's difficult to judge the correct balance between the two, or whether there is such a thing as a correct balance. I think (at least more recently) I tend to err on the robot side, but with probably an irritating number of things that I regard as satire or jokes thrown in.
It's interesting to consider how to approach a discussion with a character like Daschund (or similar characters that have come here over the years). On the face of, the act of "thinking the unthinkable" (i.e. attempting to create a rational argument to support a position that the vast majority of people wouldn't support, as a way of questioning/re-assessing assumptions) is exactly the sort of exercise that should be carried out in a place like this. If the argument is rational, then the clear, cold unemotional analysis approach is useful. It allows us to ask for the underlying reasons why we hold the views that we hold. But unfortunately these people rarely seem to make rational arguments. They just assert things, express personal tastes and throw a few insults around. It's difficult to decide whether it's a worthwhile exercise to attempt to lead them towards a rational argument, or simply ignore them or just enjoy them as cartoon characters.
Greta wrote:I have a memory in a high chair where I felt just like her. The nasty babysitter was trying to get me to eat and I was refusing; I was upset about something. Then she shouted and banged the bowl with the spoon, and the bowl broke. My favourite teddy bear bowl broken! I screamed! Then I noticed that she was panicking, so I refused her attempts to comfort me. The feeling was pure vengeance, within my great limitations, I did what I could to hurt her as much as I could by refusing to settle.That's an amazingly coherent early memory. My early memories are more vague. General feelings of profound injustice at things that I perceived at the time to be unfair. I think kids generally tend to have a naturally very strong emotional sense of what's "fair" and what isn't.
Greta wrote:I would also parse those who are "believers" and those who are "religious", the former tending to lean towards pantheistic or panenthistic ideas while the latter being more likely to be literalists. Note that the OP's claim about God being impossible cannot logically apply to pantheism and panentheism. One may disagree with those interpretations, but to say these things are "impossible" is to falsely lump those more sophisticated conceptions with the simplistic anthropomorphic Santa-like God. Thus, many believers see organised religion as misguided and corrupt while many theists question the sincerity of the unaffiliated.It seems that the "religious", as opposed to the "believers", are probably more interested in the comforts of culture, tradition and solidarity and of being part of a tribe with shared life experiences and rituals. I think those are the things which religion often provides which the more abstract, less culturally specific concept of belief does not. Belief is perhaps the philosophy that is left when the religion is distilled and the tradition and culture boils away.
Which came first? Did the abstract philosophical concepts develop and then the religion grow around them, like an exo-skeleton, to give them structure? Or did the tribal traditions and rituals, born out of the need to survive, come first and the abstractions got created as a generalization, just as the general laws of physics came from specific observations? Abstraction or instantiation first?
Dark Matter wrote: The sad fact is, people have always killed people and have used every imaginable excuse to do it. To blame man's murderous nature on religion is a just one more way to foment more bloodshed.I agree.