Home › Forums › Chat Forum › Creationist religious nutjob on R4 "One to One 9.30am"
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Creationist religious nutjob on R4 "One to One 9.30am"
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CougarFull Member
that Buddah fella is he not a form of deity they believe in?
He’s their founder and “spiritual leader,” not a deity.
pictonroadFull Memberscuzz – Member
Who said anything about an immortal soul?
Indeed, Cotic’s lifetime warrenty only covers the Soda…
snort.
miketuallyFree MemberNever done Buddhism (didn’t like Orange) but are you not forgetting that Buddah fella is he not a form of deity they believe in?
As above, Buddah’s not a god.
An atheist might believe anything, apart from that a god or god exists.
IIRC, “Famous Atheist” Sam Harris believes that the mind may live on after death and there are atheist Christians.
To me, Atheist Christianity seems like a logical next step for woolly liberal Anglicans, then all that stuff about prayer, resurrection and God can be dismissed as historical, cultural and/or allegorical.
singletrackedFree MemberI’m really not sure where you’re going with this. “Attempted murder” is a crime, it’s illegal. I mentioned it as a counterexample to your suggestion that it’s fine to try anything you like so long as you don’t succeed.
Yeah, but not really that useful a comparison when compared to lobbyists or campaign groups pushing for their view to be included in the curriculum. The opportunity cost aspect is really the point that if we remove the scope for those people to push that point, we also remove that right for ourselves. yes, there is a small cost, but it is not really harmful. All part of life’s variety. My point, which folks seemed to object to was that if some people want to campaign for certain changes to the curriculum, then fine, let them.
singletrackedFree MemberSo, when people pay homage to him, and ‘pray’ to him. Is that not a bit goddy?
and for some he was the incarnation of a ‘cosmic force’ which also sounds a little familiar
teamhurtmoreFree MemberMost Buddhists, especially western Buddhists, don’t spend much time worrying about whether gods exist or not – it’s just not an important question to them. Buddhism is essentially about living one’s life so as to gain enlightenment; there may or may not be some gods or spirits around, but they’re not of any real importance.
For Buddhists nothing is permanent. A person changes continuously, there is no element of a person that is permanent. And just as there is a causal connection between the events that make up a person’s life, so there is a causal connection between each of their lives.
Amazed at the stamina of posters on here – for the atheists, why bother? With such a clear-cut case, I cant see the reason to want to ram it home so much?
BillyBullFree MemberI was a born again Christian and work evangelising through drama and music at festivals and universities. But then I realised two things. One is was make believe and had no grounding in fact or supported theories unlike evolution. Secondly it was just bad on so many levels. Judgemental, homophobic and sexist to name but a few. So I don’t believe and I am far happier for it.
TuckerUKFree Member…for the atheists, why bother?
…the mutilation of children genitals, homophobia, subjugation of women, wars, etc.
I care, you may not.
CougarFull MemberSo, when people pay homage to him, and ‘pray’ to him. Is that not a bit goddy?
I’ve just put the end of a pen in my mouth, that doesn’t make it a chip butty.
CougarFull Member…the mutilation of children genitals, homophobia, subjugation of women, wars, etc.
How very STW: “next time, it could be a kid’s genitals!” Useful for religion threads and Jimmy Savile discussions.
miketuallyFree Memberfor the atheists, why bother?
Lots of reasons, globally. Nationally: the established church, bishops in the Lords, faith schools, influence on policy. In our house: I have two kids and a (wooly, liberal, Anglican) Christian wife and want them to see both sides.
teamhurtmoreFree MemberI care as well Tucker, but find addressing cultural rather than religious ones as the best route!
But its not the specifics behind the question, I reckon that the vast majority of posts here are from atheists and or agnostics but cant see what is the point that needs 700 or so posts to prove.
singletrackedFree MemberI’ve just put the end of a pen in my mouth, that doesn’t make it a chip butty.
not very useful. unless you put the pen in your mouth because you thought it was a chip butty.
I don’t say that makes him a god, but it would seem that some folks view him very much like a god
That’s ‘chip butty’ and ‘attempted murder’ if this is about point scoring then i don’t want to play
CougarFull MemberThe problem with
My point, which folks seemed to object to was that if some people want to campaign for certain changes to the curriculum, then fine, let them.
and
for the atheists, why bother?
is that if people lobby and other people don’t bother, we end up with things like this
getting into schools. (This is an extract from a home schooling resource, you can find the original .pdf here.)
Here’s an insight into another teaching aid; this one did make it into a school.
Fortunately, there are people “bothering.”
And finally, if you think that these are small isolated fringe cases and no-one really thinks that way, have a browse on this Facebook group to see what happens when people don’t “bother”.
Right, talk amongst yourselves for a bit, I’m going to and make tea and find something to kick.
meftyFree MemberAmazed at the stamina of posters on here – for the atheists, why bother? With such a clear-cut case, I cant see the reason to want to ram it home so much?
A very good question, only a shallow understanding of theology is evident in the discussion with the result it is rather puerile, but I guess those with little to occupy themselves can while away some time.
molgripsFree MemberI just can’t stand it when people are accusing others of people simple-minded when they themselves are being simple minded. They are slagging off something they don’t really understand, because they in many cases they don’t understand it properly.
Which is hugely ironic given the subject matter.
IanMunroFree MemberThey are slagging off something they don’t really understand, because they in many cases they don’t understand it properly.
Indeed. What’s really needed is an authoritative book on the subject.
RustySpannerFull MemberA very good question, only a shallow understanding of theology is evident in the discussion with the result it is rather puerile, but I guess those with little to occupy themselves can while away some time.
Theology is bunk.
I’m sorry, but it’s only of import as a means of attempting to justify the unjustifiable.It’s an intersting insight into human nature – no more.
CougarFull Memberonly a shallow understanding of theology is evident in the discussion
Feel free to enlighten us, the best discussions are the ones where people learn things.
singletrackedFree Memberbut Cougar, those aren’t affecting mainstream schools, those are things you have to opt into. People will be able to buy stuff like that no matter what. It isn’t part of the national school curriculum, is only approved by schools way out there which aren’t accepted by the mainstream. We can’t dictate what people can and cannot teach their children. We can bother to stop it from entering our national systems, and frankly if we don’t bother enough about our kids education to counter it rather than ban it then …well.
AdamWFree MemberI disagree with all the “unless you have a doctorate in theology you can’t discuss the fine nuances of the cosmological/ontological arguments” sort of thing.
I don’t need to study at the finest tailors in the world to state “the emperor has no clothes”.
molgripsFree MemberTheology is bunk.
Oh yes?
Is it because you don’t think God exists? Hamlet didn’t exist, we know that, but we still study it.
Oh, and according to wiki:
Theology (from Greek ???? meaning “God” and ?????, -logy, meaning “study of”) is the systematic and rational study of religion and its influences and of the nature of religious truths
Seems a perfectly reasonable and quite interesting thing to study to me.
CougarFull MemberIt isn’t part of the national school curriculum,
Well no, I’m aware that this is largely an American phenomenon at the moment and nothing to do with the UK curriculum.
However, there are plenty of church-funded schools here in the UK. There’s a story here about a few of them, for instance.
meftyFree MemberIf you are really interested in learning about any religion then I suggest you borrow some books from the library, there are plenty available. From a CofE perspective, Rowan Williams has written some excellent ones. Rebutting all the misconceptions on here would be immensely time consuming and probably futile.
RustySpannerFull MemberI said it was an interesting insight into human nature. 😀
igrfFree MemberBack to Buddhism for a tad, having had a quick reminder wiki, it was as I indicated an offshoot of the early Hindu teachings and again from a quick scope, one of the differences between one arm of Hinduism and the Buddist view of Karma is wether or not a supreme being influences Karma or not.
Either way yes I guess technically you could argue Budhists as Atheist to a degree, but they do have an alternate and complex value set not unlike Hinduism, derived from a Teacher who appears to be of a similar period or slightly pre dating Jesus Christ, who’s teachings could be argued have been construed differently by a largely more ignorant following and used to promote an entirely different Agenda than those that promoted the teachings of Buddha.
It was a long time ago I got into all this, (about the same time as the Beatles), but Karma does nobody any harm and the mysticism of the East is far more complex than the crude teachings of Abraham and Islam, so I tended to give it house room, plus the anecdotal proof of reincarnation in experiments lent a little more to the teachings in my mind back then, so the study of it all does no harm imv, better study Hinduism and Buddism than bloody Islam, but then the curriculum these days is so Political and those poor down trodden Muslims need appeasing, constantly.
Theology if that’s what this is, isn’t entirely bunk, if you mix in a little spiritualism and scientific experimentation..
CougarFull MemberRebutting all the misconceptions on here would be immensely time consuming and probably futile.
It’d be quicker than me reading all those books, and I’ll wager a lot more interesting.
Tell you what, just pick one misconception, whichever you think is the most major one perhaps, and rebutt that. Shouldn’t take too long at all.
RustySpannerFull MemberRebutting all the misconceptions on here would be immensely time consuming and probably futile.
Oh, go on.
It took us ages to post them all, the least you can do is put in a bit of effort. 😉JunkyardFree MemberRebutting all the misconceptions on here would be immensely time consuming and probably futile.
Ok just show us some physical evidence for god then we can apologise and convert
meftyFree MemberIn the the amount many of you have spent and no doubt will spend posting on the subject you could have read a lot of books which is what I intend to do now, albeit it is a detective novel – not Father Brown alas.
igrfFree MemberCougar – Member
Rebutting all the misconceptions on here would be immensely time consuming and probably futile.
It’d be quicker than me reading all those books, and I’ll wager a lot more interesting.Tell you what, just pick one misconception, whichever you think is the most major one perhaps, and rebutt that. Shouldn’t take too long at all.
CougarFull Memberigrf > I may be misinterpreting you, but you seem to have confused “study” with “promote”. We learnt about the third reich in History at school, but no-one came along and tried to get us to sign up the East Lancashire Hitler Youth.
I don’t see any harm in studying Buddhism, or Islam, at an academic level; ie, R.E. It’s quite possible to teach R.E. in a secular manner, just swap “Jesus did this” with “Christians believe that Jesus did this” and we have a winner. The bonus of that is that multi-faith R.E. is a breeze, you can cover all the major religions then. Hell, and if any of the kids fancy buying into it, they can make an informed choice rather than default to the one they’ve been given by their parents.
miketuallyFree Memberbut Cougar, those aren’t affecting mainstream schools, those are things you have to opt into. People will be able to buy stuff like that no matter what. It isn’t part of the national school curriculum, is only approved by schools way out there which aren’t accepted by the mainstream. We can’t dictate what people can and cannot teach their children. We can bother to stop it from entering our national systems, and frankly if we don’t bother enough about our kids education to counter it rather than ban it then …well.
Some of the potential sponsors of free schools were planning on having creationism taught in science lessons until some people “bothered” – http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/belief/2012/nov/30/free-schools-creationism
There have also been some concerns raised about teaching of creationism as fact in Vardy Academies.
CougarFull MemberIn the the amount many of you have spent and no doubt will spend posting on the subject you could have read a lot of books
So that’s a ‘no’ then?
molgripsFree Memberbut then the curriculum these days is so Political and those poor down trodden Muslims need appeasing, constantly
Er, well, when you are a perfectly reasonable follower of a benign major religion and everyone starts to think you are a rabid terrorist, then I think you need a bit of protection. Nothing to do with politics, it’s just common bloody decency.
meftyFree MemberYou obviously don’t understand the word futile, Wilfred Owen wrote a very fine poem about WW1 entitled futility, I suggest you read it, it is on the internet.
CougarFull MemberAnd that’s the biggest misconception on this entire thread? Oh, right, I see what you mean.
I understand the word just fine, thanks. What I don’t understand is the point in swanning in going ‘I know more than you, and I’m not telling you, read some books.’ Doesn’t really advance the discussion, y’know?
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