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What, No Petraeus Commentary?


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2012 Nov 9, 8:09am   20,627 views  109 comments

by Bellingham Bill   ➕follow (2)   💰tip   ignore  

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/11/09/petraeus-resigns-as-cia-director/

I thought he would be a formidable (R) candidate for 2016 and wondered WTH Obama was doing appointing him to CIA.

If the admin knew about the affair then that civil appointment was absolutely stellar quasi-dirty bank-shot politics.

Petraeus would be relatively safe inside the Army, but going civil he's more exposed to FBI background checks.

And D/CIA was an 'offer he couldn't refuse' LOL.

#politics

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41   Bigsby   2012 Nov 9, 4:30pm  

Peter P says

Atheism is about the non-existence of God. It has nothing to do with religions.

Believing that there is no God *is* the same as making an ontological statement about God. As with all things metaphysical, that statement is unknowable and such belief forms the basis of a religion.

Money is a religion too. It is useful if and only if people believe in it.

Are you really trying to claim that atheism and money are religions? Seriously?

42   Bellingham Bill   2012 Nov 9, 4:30pm  

The wager in Pascal's Wager is not "infinitesimal" in cost, quite the opposite.

Believing in bullshit cripples the mind. Just look at how Romney's campaign blew up due to their collective intellectual corruption.

Nazis believing they could take on the world because they were Aryan Supermen, Japanese believing their own similar dogmatic bullshit, same thing.

It's no accident that the most "atheistic" nations are also the most successful.

(Well, outside Vietnam, but their problem stems from falling into actual marxist bullshit dogma instead, plus massive overpopulation.)

43   Peter P   2012 Nov 9, 4:32pm  

Everybody believes in some bullshit.

I still believe in Santa Claus. I just need to be extra-nice to my wife right before Christmas.

The ills of religions are caused by weak minds. Religions themselves do not create weak minds. They are at worst power transfers. Then it is about control, just like everything else.

44   Bigsby   2012 Nov 9, 4:35pm  

Peter P says

It has everything to do with it.

If betting on X is cheap (or free) and it has a better outcome than the alternative, then it is always rational to bet on it irregardless on the uncertainty, unknowability, and chances.

A true belief in any particular religion (rather than just paying lip service) is far from free. It requires major sacrifices for something for which the possibility of being correct is infinitesimally small. And that still doesn't make atheism irrational.

45   Peter P   2012 Nov 9, 4:36pm  

Bigsby says

A true belief in any particular religion (rather than just paying lip service) is far from free. It requires major sacrifices for something for which the possibility of being correct is infinitesimally small. And that still doesn't make atheism irrational.

It depends. Cut out the middlemen and the belief will be affordable.

But I do not mind sacrificing a roasted suckling pig if I get to eat it too.

46   Bigsby   2012 Nov 9, 4:41pm  

Peter P says

Bigsby says

A true belief in any particular religion (rather than just paying lip service) is far from free. It requires major sacrifices for something for which the possibility of being correct is infinitesimally small. And that still doesn't make atheism irrational.

It depends. Cut out the middlemen and the belief will be affordable.

But I do not mind sacrificing a roasted suckling pig if I get to eat it too.

The cost can be rather higher than that.

47   Peter P   2012 Nov 9, 4:45pm  

Bigsby says

The cost can be rather higher than that.

But if needs not be. The problem lies not in God (the metaphysical being) but in people's tendency to believe what they want to believe.

48   Bigsby   2012 Nov 9, 4:48pm  

Peter P says

Bigsby says

The cost can be rather higher than that.

But if needs not be. The problem lies not in God (the metaphysical being) but in people's tendency to believe what they want to believe.

And the reason why people believe in God...

49   Peter P   2012 Nov 9, 4:52pm  

Bigsby says

And the reason why people believe in God...

Because they should... :-)

Some atheist choose not to believe in God because they are not comfortable in having a higher being. Many of my friends are atheists.

Afterlife has a time value too. Young people are less likely than old people to believe in an afterlife because the present value of it is perceived to be much smaller.

50   Bigsby   2012 Nov 9, 5:03pm  

Peter P says

Bigsby says

And the reason why people believe in God...

Because they should... :-)

No, because specific religions have taught them to, and those religions can have very clear and very high costs despite what you appear to have been claiming.

51   Bellingham Bill   2012 Nov 9, 5:04pm  

The best Pascal's Wager is just being the best person you can be here on Earth and let the eternal work itself out on its own.

If that's not good enough for the dieties waiting for us on the other side, fuck 'em.

http://www.galactanet.com/oneoff/theegg_mod.html

52   Peter P   2012 Nov 9, 5:06pm  

Bellingham Bill says

The best Pascal's Wager is just being the best person you can be here on Earth and let the eternal work itself out on its own.

If that's not good enough for the dieties, fuck 'em.

http://www.galactanet.com/oneoff/theegg_mod.html

What is good though?

I now believe that God is morally neutral.

53   Bigsby   2012 Nov 9, 5:11pm  

Peter P says

What is good though?

I now believe that God is morally neutral.

So presumably there is no additional cost involved in being an atheist but all the additional benefits. Wouldn't that make atheism the most rational choice?

54   Peter P   2012 Nov 9, 5:23pm  

Bigsby says

So presumably there is no additional cost involved in being an atheist but all the additional benefits. Wouldn't that make atheism the most rational choice?

What are the benefits of being an atheist?

55   Bigsby   2012 Nov 9, 6:09pm  

Peter P says

Bigsby says

So presumably there is no additional cost involved in being an atheist but all the additional benefits. Wouldn't that make atheism the most rational choice?

What are the benefits of being an atheist?

In no particular order:
Not having to waste my time doing all the ridiculous things that many religions seem to think are central to their traditions. Not deferring to people who lived 2000 years ago. An appreciation of science. Not believing that dinosaurs were vegetarians and ran around with humans. Not having to listen to people demanding that I lay down my life for their religion. Not having to live my life hating people that my religion/religious leaders tell me to hate etc. etc. etc.

56   Peter P   2012 Nov 9, 6:20pm  

Science is a religion.

There is a huge disconnect between mathematical certainty and reality. Then it is all down to what you choose to accept as moral certainty.

I am wary of any claim to objective knowledge, scientific or not, since it is the first step in monopolizing the process of truth discovery. Like many religions, Science is not very tolerant of other belief systems.

57   Peter P   2012 Nov 9, 6:24pm  

Bigsby says

Not having to waste my time doing all the ridiculous things that many religions seem to think are central to their traditions. Not deferring to people who lived 2000 years ago. An appreciation of science. Not believing that dinosaurs were vegetarians and ran around with humans. Not having to listen to people demanding that I lay down my life for their religion. Not having to live my life hating people that my religion/religious leaders tell me to hate etc. etc. etc.

I am not an atheist and I enjoy all of the above. Yes, I even appreciate science as a practical tool. Just not big-S Science. I call it Scientism.

58   Bigsby   2012 Nov 9, 6:32pm  

Peter P says

I am not an atheist and I enjoy all of the above. Yes, I even appreciate science as a practical tool. Just not big-S Science. I call it Scientism.

From your own admission, you are a believer in a very personal, not to say, wishy-washy conception of God(s), certainly compared to the beliefs of the vast majority of religious believers, so what you believe is hardly representative.
And what on earth is big-S Science?

59   Bigsby   2012 Nov 9, 6:33pm  

Peter P says

Science is a religion.

No, it isn't.

60   Peter P   2012 Nov 9, 6:34pm  

Bigsby says

And what on earth is big-S Science?

Big-S Science to science is like Libertarians to libertarians.

It is when people become dogmatic about science and reject any other school of thought.

61   Peter P   2012 Nov 9, 6:36pm  

Bigsby says

No, it isn't.

Why not? It requires faith in the scientific methods as the means of knowledge discovery. It rejects other religions. It has false prophets.

62   Bigsby   2012 Nov 9, 6:39pm  

Peter P says

It is when people become dogmatic about science and reject any school of thought other than science.

Scientists may make arguments about non-scientific matters (such as Dawkins on religion), but that is a separate issue to science and the scientific method. Are you claiming that scientists who believe in evolution are being dogmatic, for example?

63   Peter P   2012 Nov 9, 6:40pm  

Bigsby says

Are you claiming that scientists who believe in evolution are being dogmatic, for example?

I am saying that scientists who reject creationism are being dogmatic.

Evolution and creationism can co-exist.

I reject neither.

64   Bigsby   2012 Nov 9, 6:41pm  

Peter P says

Bigsby says

No, it isn't.

Why not? It requires faith in the scientific methods as the means of knowledge discovery. It rejects other religions. It has idols.

You are just being ridiculous. The scientific method isn't based on faith. It doesn't make claims about other religions. And what do you mean it has idols? There have been great scientists that people admire and respect. That hardly makes them idols, does it?

65   Bigsby   2012 Nov 9, 6:43pm  

Peter P says

I am saying that scientists who reject creationism are being dogmatic.

No, they aren't.

Peter P says

Evolution and creationism can co-exist.

I have no idea what you mean by that.

66   Peter P   2012 Nov 9, 6:47pm  

Scientific methods require assumptions and everything statistical require a notion of moral certainty.

Scientists (not the methods) certainly make claims about other competing world views. (Scientific or not)

For example, Newton can be seen as an idol or a false prophet. Newtonian physics was accepted as the truth before quantum mechanics.

Now, what if there is a "higher" science waiting to be discovered?

Bad knowledge can be worse than no knowledge.

67   Peter P   2012 Nov 9, 6:49pm  

Bigsby says

Peter P says

I am saying that scientists who reject creationism are being dogmatic.

No, they aren't.

Peter P says

Evolution and creationism can co-exist.

I have no idea what you mean by that.

Evolution could have been the process chose by the intelligent designer. It is down to teleology. We will never know.

Creationism does not require a magic wand.

No system of knowledge discovery can reject creationism.

Occam's Razor has no metaphysical basis. It can at best convince people to choose one theory over another. This smells like a religion again.

Sometimes, we have to be honest to ourselves and accept that we simply do not know. Then, we are free to believe. Be happy. :-)

68   lostand confused   2012 Nov 9, 6:54pm  

Peter P says

I am saying that scientists who reject creationism are being dogmatic.
Evolution and creationism can co-exist.
I reject neither.

No they can't in a scientific construct. Nice touch, trying to paint someone interested in facts as dogmatic. This seems to be the prevailing attitude of the right wingers -try and paint the opposition with your behaviour.

I never understand the fundamental folks trying to make faith equal to science-they are two different things. Newer religions like Christianity , Islam , Scientology etc require unquestioned faith. For example the whole thing about the Virgin Mary. If it were science , someone would ask the question-was she impregnated by the holy spirit or did she just have a wild night of partying?? The latter would be the most logical conclusion. But faith will preculde you from that thought process. It narrows down your thought process and only lets you think in "acceptable" set in stone outcomes.

Faith is faith and science is science-I never understand the obsession of the fundamentalists to try and replace science by faith.

69   Bigsby   2012 Nov 9, 7:01pm  

Peter P says

Creationism does not require a magic wand.

No system of knowledge discovery can reject creationism.

I'm afraid you'll have to explain those to me. And I really hope you aren't going to start quoting Deepak Chopra to us.

70   Bigsby   2012 Nov 9, 7:03pm  

Peter P says

Sometimes, we have to be honest to ourselves and accept that we simply do not know. Then, we are free to believe. Be happy. :-)

I see. So we do not know that the world is older than 6000 years. Is that what you are saying? I think your amateur philosophizing is befuddling your brain.

71   Bigsby   2012 Nov 9, 7:08pm  

Peter P says

Newton can be seen as an idol or a false prophet. Newtonian physics was accepted as the truth before quantum mechanics.

Now, what if there is a "higher" science waiting to be discovered?

Bad knowledge can be worse than no knowledge.

Or he can be seen as neither.
And I rather think you have a fundamental misconception of what the scientific method entails. It doesn't make any claims to the 'truth'.
And so what if something is demonstrated to be incorrect? That is one of the great strengths of the scientific method. It is the reason why we have progressed as a species.

72   MisdemeanorRebel   2012 Nov 9, 10:31pm  

Science is a process.

Religion is a faith based belief system.

Repeatedly holding small bits over a bunsen burner and noticing that the material made largely of the same stuff has one color flame and those made up of other material has a different color has another is a process to gain knowledge.

Accepting that ~2000 years ago a tax collector had a vision on a road is an article of faith. Or talking donkeys, men living in whales, wrestling otre beings from beyond known reality, or parting seas in half. Or believing that a late Iron Age Jewish Carpenter had to be nailed to a cross to suffer for all men's sins, even though his "Father" could apparently create the entire universe by Fiat.

73   Shaman   2012 Nov 9, 11:16pm  

Trust a bunch of atheists to hijack a thread in an effort to prosetylize.

74   Bigsby   2012 Nov 9, 11:22pm  

Quigley says

Trust a bunch of atheists to hijack a thread in an effort to prosetylize.

You didn't read the thread, did you?

75   Bellingham Bill   2012 Nov 10, 12:02am  

"Trust a bunch of atheists to hijack a thread in an effort to prosetylize."

If a man commits adultery with the wife of his neighbor, both the adulterer and the adulteress shall surely be put to death. -- Leviticus 20:10

But hey, according to Ryan last week, Obama is going to destroy the "Judeo-Christian" foundation of this country.

So when's Petraeus' execution?

76   Peter P   2012 Nov 10, 1:41am  

Quigley says

Trust a bunch of atheists to hijack a thread in an effort to prosetylize.

I did prove that atheism is just as intolerant of other religions. ;-)

77   Vicente   2012 Nov 10, 1:49am  

Peter P says

Atheism is about the non-existence of God.

I disagree, it's about the lack of a need for magic-based backing for the universe. There is no need for gods of any kind, nor animal spirits living in the trees, or reincarnation.

As to Patraeus, don't know, don't care terribly much. This guy was no Stormin' Norman or Colin Powell as far as penetrating the public consciousness.

First thing I think of is Chris Rock:


I'M NOT SAYING IT'S RIGHT, BUT I UNDERSTAND!

78   marcus   2012 Nov 10, 2:55am  

Vicente says

I disagree, it's about the lack of a need for magic-based backing for the universe. There is no need for gods of any kind, nor animal spirits living in the trees, or reincarnation.

Not sure why this is happening in this thread, but I disagree. It's not about need or lack of need in the way you say.

Yes needing to have answers to everything is behind the belief or I guess (indirectly) faith of many religious or spiritual people.

But ironically needing to have answers is behind the atheist point of view(not all, but many) as well. They are not comfortable with the answer "I don't know"
and I DON'T NEED TO KNOW.

They declare that they do know, that god does not exist. Why, because they need to know, one way or the other.

I'm not talking all atheists. Some are very close to agnostics. They just don't believe, and it's not relevant to them (beyond disdain for some of the harm that extremists do in the name of religion).

I'm talking about the religious atheists who NEED to proselytize. It's a religious fervor.

79   marcus   2012 Nov 10, 2:56am  

About Patreous, I wonder what the line would be on whether this is about Beghazi. That is if people were betting on it, and if they could know.

80   zzyzzx   2012 Nov 12, 4:12am  

Obligatory:

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