7/18/08

Why You and I Can't Understand Atheists

FYI: this post has been moved here.

16 comments:

  1. Well, I salute your goal and I wish you God's Speed. Just remember, Hell is locked from the inside, and it's not going to be opened by logic or reason.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Uh, Stan, with all due respect, you need to brush up a bit on logic. You mention an article on ethics written by an atheist and then say:

    The article is both clearly written and is a fair and definitive statement of how Atheists think about transcendentals such as ethics.

    That got me curious. Since "atheism" simply means "not believing in God", and says nothing per se about ethics, how can you claim that this one atheist has made a "fair and definitive statement of how atheists think" about ethics? Atheists, like stamp collectors, have all different kinds of ethics. You then go on:

    And how they [atheists] think in general.

    Sorry, you just lost me. Would you take me seriously if I claimed that, say, the Malleus Maleficarum is representative of how Christians think "in general"? If you want to argue against consequentialism, fine. But please be careful with your labels- not all atheists are consequentialists. If you can demonstrate that atheists must logically be consequentialists, please do so.

    You also say:

    I have previously outlined the several causes that seem to lead to Atheism. The need to preserve the worldview-cocoon and safety from external moral authority is strong. But the corresponding loss of truth-finding ability when embracing Atheism is exacerbated by the artificial truth-manufacturing that is needed to support the cocoon.

    Now, this may be the reason that you embraced atheism once upon a time- I can't know that. But despite the popularity of this view among Christians, in its pure form "You are an atheist because you hate God", it is merely risible. I could with just as much justification accuse you of disbelieving in Santa for exactly the same reason. However, I think it more likely that you do not believe in Santa for the same reason I do not believe in God: no evidence.

    And what does this "cocoon" that you claim atheists have consist of? Not believing in something for which we see no evidence is not a "cocoon". If you can present evidence that God exists, please do so.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Instead of throwing around b.s. accusations that all atheists are living in denial, with upside-down logic, scared of moral authority, etc., why don't you accept some responsibility for failing to make convincing arguments?

    I constantly fail at communicating my thoughts coherently and convincingly. I just hope that every once in a while, some nugget of insight gets out. Can you admit the same?

    Of course it is difficult for atheists and theists to understand each other. It's a pretty fundamental disagreement. Now show some maturity to match your years and stop whining that it's all the other side's fault.

    With that said, allow me point out where your arguments fail to convince me, recognizing that this may be the result of a poor argument or just a poor transmission of that argument.

    So the term "consequentialist" apparently means that the consequence outweighs the tactics, not that the consequence has any moral value. The ethic then is without moral value.

    I fail to see why consequentialism is without moral value. If two people share common values for life, freedom, lack of suffering, etc. then a consequentialist answer to the question of, say, euthanasia does have moral value, to those struggling to figure out how to choose the "right" action to be consistent with their values.

    We can see clearly that the proposed ethic states that the conclusion is the imperative, and that the supporting elements (premises) are secondary and are to be selected for their ability to support the conclusion. This is classical definition of rationalization(1), the opposition to rationality.

    This is where you appear to go off track. You want to taint consequentialism with our dirty associations with the word "rationalization". Rationalization means making excuses after the fact. The direction of time here is important. When someone rationalizes, they can cover up malicious intent by pointing to the positive outcome, which may have only been due to chance. Consequentialism, on the other hand, is a method of forethought in which the positive outcome is the intent.

    The other way in which you appear to want to taint consequentialism, is by saying that it is about achieving a goal "by any means necessary". But what people associate with this phrase is the pursuit of a single goal at the expense of all other goals and disregard for collateral damage. However, consequentialism takes into account all of the consequences of your actions, not just your goals.

    And this is really kind of silly, because theists and atheists alike use consequentialist reasoning to make moral arguments. "If we teach comprehensive sex education, our children will become promiscuous." "If we let gay parents adopt, their children will turn out gay."

    Your post just gets further off track from there. You fail to convincingly link consequentialism (choosing actions based on outcomes) with inverted logic (cherry-picking support for preselected conclusions). They are two completely different things. It would be convenient to your argument if they had something to do with each other, but they don't.

    Why else would a person “without a belief” argue it so persistently and passionately? Only the need for self-justification could answer that drive.

    If you're not a regular visitor to AtheismIsDead for self-justification, then why are you here?

    ReplyDelete
  4. "Sometimes I try to communicate with one. But it is always the same, faced by artificial constructs advertised as facts, rebuttal by denial of the obvious, complete inability to connect on a rational basis. Empirically speaking, it’s a proven waste of time."

    Then I have a creative suggestion for you: never speak to an atheist again, and we shall both be spending our time better.

    ReplyDelete
  5. teoleolgical ethics. What makes a thing good is the outcome. Utilitarianism is a form of conseuqentualism, greatest good for the greatest number.

    the irony is among those who teach ethics and philosophers to are ethicists, consquentialism is really way down on the list. It's considered to have had the final nail driven in its coffin. At least that is the case with utilitarianism and consqeuntalism takes some major hits as well.

    the major philosopher who destroyed it is John Rawls who wrote a book called A theory of Justice. That is a major work of the 20th century and everyone should read it.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Interesting article. The first paragraph is particularly interesting because, as an atheist, I feel exactly the same way when I'm talking to Christians.

    I can see the consequentialist argument boils down to "the end determines the means", but you're stretching to then conclude that this is equivalent to "the end justifies the means." In an atheistic world view, actions aren't examined in isolation of their consequences. Believe it or night, there is a genuine sense of right and wrong which is not very different from that of the theist.

    The only real difference is that the atheist does not claim that his or her ethics are Divinely inspired.

    And on first principles-based logic, I very much prefer that mode of argument, because there is no justification for religion or belief in God that can be built up from first principles. Any such argument automatically favours the atheistic view.

    ReplyDelete
  7. This is quite a well designed blog but dream on. I am an atheist and I know there are millions of others like me all communicating, uniting and building.

    I discuss the topic every day and have never heard an atheist use the term "consequentialist ethics". Most of us agree that atheism, in itself, does not endow anyone with worthy morals or ethics. They are not the same qualities and therefore cannot be compared.

    If I say that 7+1=8 and you insist that the answer is 9 I disagree, not because 8 is a better number than 9 nor is it because I believe 8 people are more noble than 9 people. Nine, in this case is just wrong because it does not explain the evidence.

    There may be a few people, infected with religion, who, despite their risible beliefs, manage to maintain high ethical and moral standards - usually by ignoring most of the tenets of their religion, but from this article you are not one of them.

    You lie and misrepresent our case like a champion liar for Jesus.

    You also mention biology. Your comments reveal a superficial knowledge of evolutionary theory along with a deep misunderstanding of its process. To deal with all of this I would need to take you back to your early childhood and re-educate you in order to overcome the religious misinformation which so distorts you world-view.

    I take heart in the knowledge that, even as we are faced with hoards of indoctrinated religious idiots in the present, the mountains of evidence for a world without supernatural intervention continues to grow for the benefit of future generations.

    Let me know if you have the courage to publish this.

    ReplyDelete
  8. I really enjoyed reading this Stan.

    Frustration has been setting in a lot on me lately. All I want is an honest and open discussion but every atheist I come across wants to win an argument rather than have a discussion.

    A big part of me wants to learn how to effectively counter what you have illuminated in this article but I should probably take your advice and stop wasting my time.

    By the way, I love your site Stan. Great stuff!

    ReplyDelete
  9. So to sum it up you are attacking people for basing their ethics on the real world. You know, the effects they have on people instead of being based off abstract principles. You are aware there are situations where it is mandatory to break principles? The most obvious is when two or more clash. And you resolve that... by looking at consequences.

    ReplyDelete
  10. I invite all readers to compare the commments made to points in the article written.

    Then draw your own conclusions.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Stan- you say:

    I invite all readers to compare the commments made to points in the article written.

    Then draw your own conclusions.


    Uh, Stan, don't we all do that anyway? How about responding to some of the criticisms?

    ReplyDelete
  12. With all due respect for Stan and him being 64, but gosh guys, you seem to be pretty lacking in content lately around here. I'd be very surprised if any of you guys would honestly subscribe to Stan's idea of logic, yet here it is.

    Hey on a different note, have you guys been over to Debunking Debinked Lately? Some terrific articles.

    ReplyDelete
  13. I have a tendency to rub my beard and ask why these theists I talk to can't understand that there probably are no gods or God or YHWH or Krishna or that Jesus may not have been a real person. They are all so cock sure that there is not only a god but it is his god (usually the god of the Wholly Babble). Discussions of the history of religion, the universality of many Babble stories, the looniness of almost all of them, the symbolism inherent in them, and why they think the one they believe is true and all these others are lies get absolutely nowhere with them. Sometimes it's a failure of imagination and sometimes it's just plain obstinacy.

    How can there be a definitive statement of how atheists think about anything? We are all of different minds and arrived at where we are by different routes. As far as an "atheist ethics" is concerned, there ain't no such thing! I've known atheists who would never cheat on their taxes, their timecards at work, or their wives and girlfriends. I've know others who would but I must say, I've not known as many atheists who would as Christians!

    There are as many "atheist ethics" as there are atheists and as many "Christian ethics" as there are Christians.

    ReplyDelete
  14. well said, agki

    religion is such a drag. believe what you want as humility permits... no need to subject everyone else to it though

    ReplyDelete
  15. Atheist and Moral are oxymoronic, they aren't held to any ethics while ethics clearly exist.

    ReplyDelete
  16. "Atheist and Moral are oxymoronic, they aren't held to any ethics while ethics clearly exist."

    Atheists, like everyone else, are accountable to society, secular laws, their own consciences and well-being, and those closest to them. The existence of ethics does not necessitate the existence of anything supernatural.

    ReplyDelete