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Are Objectivists happy?

Posted by $ jbrenner 9 years, 10 months ago to Philosophy
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http://experts.umich.edu/pubDetail.as...

R. David Hayward has developed a survey that attempts to define happiness and correlate it with many factors (nationality, religious affiliation or lack thereof, income, wealth, etc.). The goal is to predict future health and well-being.

From Hayward's abstract:

"Religious non-affiliates did not differ overall from affiliates in terms of physical health outcomes (although atheists and agnostics did have better health on some individual measures including BMI, number of chronic conditions, and physical limitations), but had worse positive psychological functioning characteristics, social support relationships, and health behaviors. On dimensions related to psychological well-being, atheists and agnostics tended to have worse outcomes than either those with religious affiliation or those with no religious preference."

My purpose in posting this is not to say anything derogatory about atheists or Objectivists, but it is part of my personal self-assessment of whether I would be happier if I did decide to become an Objectivist. At this point, I am not an Objectivist. One question that is an entirely logical counterargument to the possibility that Objectivists might not be happier than the general population would be, "Are people who are happier than the general population delusional about their reality"? I am sure that many Gulchers would presume that most Christians are happily delusional in their mysticism, for instance.
SOURCE URL: https://michiganhappiness.wordpress.com/


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  • 13
    Posted by khalling 9 years, 10 months ago
    First problem I say with the study-atheists ARE NOT a coherent group. they are all over the map, philosophically, ethically. it sucks as a category.
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    • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
      I have to agree with that.
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      • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
        Then what is the point of citing the article? Not only is the non-religious group incoherent and unrelated to Objectivism, the religious, agnostic, and no preference groups are just as incoherent, including people with all kinds and degrees of common sense and otherwise mixtures of not particularly religious values and views. This is America, not the 3rd century Dark Ages of the Christian era. No study can assess individual success without regard to the meaning of the ideas that the people in fact hold. The "study" is an example of a non-conceptual attempt at 'correlation' while ignoring essentials.
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    • Posted by IndianaGary 9 years, 10 months ago
      I'd go farther; by what standard is the measure of "happiness" being graded? I'm a generally happy, optimistic, person but have moments of anger and frustration over what is happening in the world. I'd say any measure of happiness would have to be contextual, not some one-size-fits-all generic grade.
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  • 10
    Posted by Mamaemma 9 years, 10 months ago
    Jbrenner, I am intrigued by your statement "if I did decide to become an Objectivist". What would this entail? A change in your beliefs? Is it possible to change a belief by making a choice? I can see changing my actions through choice, but a belief? I can see changing a belief through learning new facts and/or thinking about the facts, but just deciding to believe differently doesn't seem rational to me. Could you please expand on your comment? Thanks
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    • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
      First of all, I did not use the term "belief", and with good reason. I prefer the term "worldview". It is based on a combination of empirical observation and logic, and consequently is far more objective. On this point, I think there will be no disagreement within the Gulch. The term "beliefs" should be considered a pejorative in the Gulch, just like faith is.

      My biggest problem with Objectivism, however, is with regard to how Rand redefined atheism very cleverly such that she had no burden of proof. While I know that most in this forum will disagree with me on the following point, I consider that an avoidance (a form of blanking out) of one of, if not the, most important philosophical question, "From whence have we come?" I find it completely illogical to see that there is a cause for everything else in existence, yet not ask how such existence came into being. It is far easier for me to conclude that a being of superior intelligence and power is responsible for the universe than it is to not conclude that. I can agree that since the big bang that existence exists, but the cause for the big bang effect remains elusive. Until proven otherwise, atheism as defined by non-Objectivists requires more faith than anyone should have. Arriving at agnosticism as a conclusion until further knowledge is obtained is valid (at least temporarily). I think that Rand's conclusion in favor of atheism via inventing her own definition was a copout, and I fully expect to be downvoted accordingly by the atheists in this forum.
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      • 11
        Posted by Zenphamy 9 years, 10 months ago
        j, Rand had extremely strong opinions about words. Words have meanings (definitions) "Definitions are the guardians of rationality, the first line of defense against the chaos of mental disintegration." So to state that Rand 'redefined atheism' is a stretch, anymore than she redefined 'selfishness' or 'altruism' or 'free market capitalism'. Further, to require proof of a negative or null set is a juvenile response to assessment of an uncomfortable reality. It's like the never ending response of a child to an answer or description of __Why"". Rand went further to accept the definition of God as determined by theologians, "God....a being whose only definition is that he is beyond man's power to conceive."

        And your posed "most important philosophical question" of "From whence have we come?" ignores the most basic and powerful principle of Objective Philosophy--Existence Exists and A=A, and leads you to search for answers to your question, from a being (or those that claim, with no objective or factual proof, that they are his prophets to whom God spoke and explained) that by definition "is beyond man's power to conceive". So you've placed yourself in a contradiction of premises that you can never resolve or escape from, much as the age old 'Which came first, the chicken or the egg?'.

        I'll go further and question your 'agreement' that 'the big bang' happened and brought 'existence to existence'. A theory that has never matched with observational evidence and has required continuous adjustments to fit and the additions of more godlike answers like 'Dark Energy and Dark Matter' and 'instantaneous expansion/acceleration'. Furthermore, a theory that originated from a French Catholic Priest astronomer, from the Catholic theologian concept of the 'Primeval Egg'.

        But most of all, I think you're continuing to misunderstand Objectivist philosophy. It's a philosophy of life for the individual. It's not an answer or study of what can't be conceived, it's a system of how to gain knowledge of reality and can never give one direction on searching for answers within the supernatural and non-conceivable.
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        • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
          I will agree with the "chicken or egg" analogy, but I reject your argument (and those of many theologians and accepted by Rand) regarding that a superior being is "beyond man's power to conceive". That is a logical fallacy. Many men have conceived of a superior being. Their conceptions are likely full of errors.

          I am glad to see your questioning of the big bang theory. CBJ and I are in a discussion elsewhere in this thread in which I say that the big bang theory is inconsistent with the idea that existence has always existed. I agree that A = A and that existence exists now, but as I said previously, I am intellectually unsatisfied with a philosophy that does not address the question, "From whence did we come?" I pondered this question long before I had ever heard of Rand. Likewise, I am not demanding proof of a negative. I am willing to accept that there are some things that I just do not understand at this point, and may never understand.

          Yes, I am looking for answers. Just because you and Rand consider my question not worth pursuing does not mean that I or anyone else have to agree with you. To not pursue the answer to my question, that would truly make me unhappy and would be a denial of whom I am.
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          • Posted by Zenphamy 9 years, 10 months ago
            j; I'm not proposing that you don't look for answers. I'm only suggesting that you do so within the reality of your life and with logical, rational reasoning based on provable facts.

            I'll note that you use the term "superior being" rather than supernatural being. I take that to be based on a belief that man is NOT a or the superior being of the existence we find ourselves in. And that concept is one that I totally reject, until someone comes up with some type of proof otherwise. That's the type of thinking that has led to AGW and other anti-human concepts.
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            • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
              The idea that we are to presume that humanity is the most evolved entity in the universe over the timeframe of the universe is about as likely as the universe getting into current life-supporting condition quite by accident. A similar view of the universe was once held by those who believed that the sun revolved around the Earth, rather than vice versa. The only difference is that the Earth has since been proven to revolve around the sun. Give astronomers time. I will eventually be proven right. I use the term "superior being" because I do not ascribe many of the unproven characteristics associated with supernatural beings to such a being or beings.
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              • Posted by Maritimus 9 years, 10 months ago
                J and Z,
                Thank you so much. Your discussion is the one I enjoyed the most ever since I joined the Gulch. These kind of questions are the ones I was hoping to see discussed and so frequently disappointed with missing them.
                The things I am going to write here may not be as crystal clear as those you addressed, but the issues are happiness and the nature of human life in the existence which, obviously, exists. Look at them as an attempt to contribute, however modestly, to your discussion.
                1. Each human being is a unique instance of humanity. Nobody ever existed that was "carbon copy" (i.e. completely identical) of any one of us and no such identical copy will ever exist.. That is an inevitable consequence of the nature of the phenomenon we call life (living matter). Thus happiness is a very complex (and not quantifiable) concept pertaining to each and only one individual. To talk about atheists or objectivists as being happy or happier is nonsense to me. As we have, sadly, observed recently, too many times, some people are happy to blow themselves up.
                2. We know that it is in the nature of our solar system to have arisen and that it will result eventually in the sun exploding and engulfing our planet. Recently there was news about people being able to measure the tremor from the gravitational waves caused the collision of two black holes. That collision occurred some billions of years ago. What I am proposing for your consideration is the non-simultaneity of possible occurrences of life in this existence.
                3. I consider myself an objectivist rookie. And to the best of my ability to understand this is consistent with everything I ever learned (during my 80+ years), but I accept readily that there is an infinite supply of concepts that I never formed. To many questions I am willing to answer I don't know.
                4. Not so long ago I went to a whole day lecture about Augustine of Hippo. At one point in the afternoon the lecturer, a known authority on the subject went, step by step, through Augustine's proof that God created man. It occurred to me while listening to that and I told the lecturer at the following questions period. "This is only a glimpse from what I just heard you say. But it seems to me clear that I could turn over 180 degrees that set of argument steps and prove that man invented God." I was thrilled to see him pose for a few seconds and then say: "Yes." I am too lazy to search anywhere (quick attempts did not work) in writing that series of steps. I have known for long time that God is a human invention. That is good enough for me.
                Again, thank you for the thoughtful and very interesting discussion.
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                • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
                  The traditional arguments for god are all logical fallacies trying to make reason the handmaiden of faith, serving to rationalize what is already believed on faith. That is well-kown history from the early Church. They have come to be examples of a variety of different kinds of fallacies explained in elementary logic texts -- to the extent it is not forbidden by political correctness.
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                  • Posted by strugatsky 9 years, 10 months ago
                    Not only by the early Church (implying Christianity), but by all other religions since human beings began worshiping rocks and looking for answers to everything that they could not understand.
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                    • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
                      Some of it, especially among the most primitive, didn't get that far because they had no concept of or concern with logic at all. Hijacking reason as the handmaiden of faith in the tortured sophistry of the famous traditional "arguments for God", like those by Anselm and Aquinas, couldn't occur until reason began to reappear in the culture. (That is what I meant by the "traditional" arguments for God.)
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              • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
                Evolution is not metaphysical chance; life evolved in accordance with identity, causality, and survivability under the principles of Darwinian evolution. Whether or not man is the most evolved form of life or there is any other life elsewhere in the universe at all is not decided by rationalizing off a roulette wheel and is irrelevant to Creationist fallacies insisting that a super intelligence must have "designed" the universe. Denying these fallacies has nothing to do with believing the sun and the stars revolve around the earth. It is not a "similar view of the universe".
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          • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
            The religious characterization of god as "beyond man's power to conceive" is due to the acknowledge fantasies of god as having no limits, i.e., no identity. The alleged infinite powers are so filled with self-contradictions that it is impossible to conceive. That is so obvious that the theologians had to resort to faith in a supernatural "beyond man's power to conceive". Rejecting such nonsense is not a "logical fallacy". Without identity and non-contradiction there could be no logic.

            Pursuit of understanding the nature of these questions does not require or allow adopting the religious mentality. To understand with self-honesty that mentality is to reject it.
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            • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
              You either misunderstood or intentionally misrepresented what I said regarding a "logical fallacy". This is the nth intentional misrepresentation I have seen you make, where n is now beyond count. While you often have much that is useful to add, your continual intentional misrepresentations of what others write is self-defeating.

              I am willing to listen to a reasoned argument. The best that I have heard on this subject is "Nothing can be proven one way or the other, so why waste time on it?" This is a reasonable response.
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              • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
                I provided a straightforward, serious explanation of the historical and logical origin of the notion of religious arguments about a god as "beyond man's power to conceive", which you apparently don't know anything about. The explanation is a reasoned argument. Ayn Rand did not commit a "logical fallacy".

                You said: "I reject your argument (and those of many theologians and accepted by Rand) regarding that a superior being is 'beyond man's power to conceive'. That is a logical fallacy. Many men have conceived of a superior being."

                Those are your own words, not a "misrepresentation"

                Contractions do not exist and cannot be "conceived": The contradictory parts cannot be integrated into a conception, only stated separately. Identifying that is not a "logical fallacy". It is "why theologians historically ran from their contradictions into the realm of denying that God can be conceived at all, while continuing to talk about It, as if that mysticism could save them.

                You do not get to impose the pronouncement that a "reasonable argument" can only be what you say it is as "nothing can be proved one way or the other". The prospect of proof does not even arise for the incomprehensible. Before proving something, one must state what it is that is being talked about, without contradiction.

                This is not the first time you have falsely accused me of "misrepresenting" you, only to have your own words quoted back to you and your own misunderstanding revealed. Your false, personal accusations of motives you make up as "continual intentional misrepresentations" piled on with juvenile soap box geek taunting "where n is now beyond count" are dishonest and inappropriate, "professor". They do not belong here.
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        • Posted by Dobrien 9 years, 10 months ago
          "The day science begins to study non-physical phenomena It will make more progress in
          1 decade than in all the previous centuries of it's existence" Nickola Tesla
          Arguably the greatest producer during the most rapid growth period the world has ever known and maybe because of him.
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      • Posted by $ CBJ 9 years, 10 months ago
        I am an atheist in this forum and did not downvote you. Ayn Rand did not invent her own definition of atheism, her formulation is a fairly widespread one: “There is no evidence of a creator, so there is no reason for me to believe in one, so I don’t.” If there is a cause for everything that exists, then if God exists there must be a cause for (him,her,it); and if a cause for God exists, then there must be a cause for that cause, etc. It’s an infinite regress. Existence must logically precede causation; without existence, no causation is possible.
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        • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
          Yes the fallacious argument from design creationism is an infinite regress, including the loopy space alien version. Understanding why is not required to reject the fallacy, but it does show that it is self-refuting. They claim that "complexity" requires consciousness design to create existence, then concoct an intelligent source of design far more complex than what they started with, putting them into an even deeper hole on their own premise. There is no end to it. But they don't see it because complexity wasn't the root of it to begin with, they invert the relation between existence and consciousness in a religious mindset confusing identity and confusing causation as the premise.
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        • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
          Rand invented that definition of atheism. Now it is a well accepted one, certainly well accepted amongst atheists.

          At this point, I reject Rand's premise that there is no evidence of a creator. The fact that the universe exists at all, let alone in all its detail from the nano to the scale of the universe is argument enough for an intelligent, powerful cause.

          Regarding the infinite regress argument, it is the best argument on behalf of atheism. The argument fails if an intelligent, powerful being has always existed and was self-sufficient on its own. The question is whether a creator has always existed, or whether matter invented itself. The concept of matter creating itself is an absurdity.
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          • Posted by Zenphamy 9 years, 10 months ago
            I've always liked Albert Einstein's quote about matter: "Concerning matter, we have all been wrong. What we have called matter is energy, whose vibration has been so lowered to be perceptible to the senses. There is no matter."

            Bohr and Tesla made similar comments. And Einstein went further to state that (paraphrased) 'Energy can neither be destroyed or created'.

            So, quite possibly the greatest mind(s) of the 19th and 20th century, kind of answers your question about the applicability of Objective philosophy to the issue of life. And I'll note, (though I have serious questions about the recent report of gravity wave detection), every prediction of Einstein's Relativity and Special Relativity has passed the test of observable proof.
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            • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
              Interesting quote from Einstein. I had not heard that one. Strangely enough, I have always envisioned the big bang as a energy-to-matter conversion. Thanks for the enlightenment (pun intended).
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          • Posted by BeenThere 9 years, 10 months ago
            Existence exists........................matter is and ever shall be................matter is neither created or destroyed..........................axiomatic.
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            • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
              Existence and identity are axiomatic concepts. The concepts and principles of matter and conservation of matter and energy are physics, not philosophy, and not axiomatic. Nuclear reactions and other more subtle experiments show that matter can be created and destroyed as it is partially transformed into energy.
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              • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
                Excuse me, but you are wrong on multiple points here. First of all, as BeenThere correctly points out, a change in form is not creation or destruction. Second of all, the conservation laws of mass, energy, and momentum (i.e. the physics as you call it) are the physical world basis for "Existence exists". The conservation laws are the primary data upon which the conclusion that "Existence exists" is drawn. No logical conclusion can be more fundamental than the underlying data that are its foundation.
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                • Posted by Steven-Wells 9 years, 10 months ago
                  You've got it backwards. "Existence exists" is metaphysical, at the axiomatic level. Then (in philosophical order) comes epistemology and further to the physical sciences.
                  Physics coveys to us the conservation laws of mass-energy. momentum, angular momentum, charge, lepton number, and so on. They are the conclusion to the primary of existence, not some primary that enforces existence to exist. The conservation laws don't prove existence, but, as they must be, they are non-contradictory with existence.

                  Transformation of mass to energy or energy to mass is hardly some special case of anything. Nuclei are constantly intra-trading minute amounts of mass-energy. Mass "transforming" into energy is merely a re-reference of equals, per E=mc³. It is no different from a kilogram of vegetables transforming into some equivalent number of pounds of vegetables. Or in the style of a current presidential campaign, "My genitals are not a mere 6 inches. My measurement is terrific. It's 152,400 microns, and that's an awesome number."
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                  • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
                    You meant mc^2 not mc^3, I think Trump is now down to the nm level :-(, and I wouldn't call mass-energy conversion the same as a different number of units of measurement for the weight of vegetables -- mass or energy transforming into the other are changing to a different kind of thing, just like F=ma is a relation of force to change in momentum, not different units of the same thing. (If there is some other unifying 'super vegetable' existent explaining both mass and energy we don't know what it is.)

                    But yes philosophy precedes the special sciences like physics. There could be no science and no logic at all without at least implicitly recognizing the axioms of existence, identity, its corollary of causation, and consciousness, and the relation between them with consciousness as awareness, not creation, of existence. The axiomatic concepts existence and identity refer to everything that is, was or will be, not laboratory measurements from experiments prior to the axiomatic concepts. The axiomatic concepts were required before the laws of physics could be formulated or any process of experiment and measurement.

                    And yes, he got it backwards to say the least. I was not "wrong on multiple points".
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                    • Posted by Steven-Wells 9 years, 10 months ago
                      Oops! My aging eyes didn't catch my mistype of E=mc². That should have been ASCII 0178, not 0179.

                      I started writing a bunch of other stuff to argue against the primitive (Newtonian) world view of physics, but it came out looking like an argument by intimidation via relativistic quantum mechanics. So I deleted it. Instead look at the next sunrise. Is what came up the sun or a mass to energy conversion system. We're normally pretty casual about the mass-energy transformations of everyday phenomena in macro and micro scales.
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              • Posted by BeenThere 9 years, 10 months ago
                A change of form (transformation) is not creation or destruction..........the existent still exists but in a different form.
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                • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
                  "Matter is neither created nor destroyed" is the older formulation of the law of conservation of mass, with the parallel statement of conservation of energy. They were supplanted with the more general principle of the conservation of the combination after more became known. The conservation laws are laws of physics, not axiomatic and not another form of Ayn Rand's axiomatic concept of existence in the form "existence exists".
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          • Posted by $ CBJ 9 years, 10 months ago
            Can you show some supporting evidence that Rand invented that definition of atheism? Atheists have been refuting the alleged evidence of a creator for centuries.

            It is not logical to state that an argument fails if something exists for which you provide no evidence. It's the equivalent of my saying, "There is no invisible elephant standing next to me," and then your replying, "Your argument fails if there really is an invisible elephant standing next to you."
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            • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
              No, he can't show you supporting evidence because it isn't true.

              Worse are his false attacks against Ayn Rand claiming she "cleverly" redefined atheism to evade a "burden of proof" in a "copout" and that it "requires more faith than anyone should have". He has a creationist "design" religious mindset and neither understands Objectivism nor knows why Ayn Rand wrote what she did. His hostility to Ayn Rand is becoming increasingly evident as he makes bald pronouncements misstating what she wrote and invents false motives arbitrarily attributed to her in his attacks. Accusing her of "blanking out" for rejecting Creationism is really stupid, but typical of the religious mindset regardless of its shifting terminology. A sign of rationalizing is claiming what someone else's motives he knows nothing about 'must have' been along with what 'must have' been involved in a 'creation' of the whole universe.

              Atheism means a-theism, the nonbelief in theism. Atheism and theism are exhaustive and mutually exclusive. You have to believe theism to be a theist and if you don't for any reason you are not and therefore atheist. A slightly narrower use is the explicit rejection of theism, an active refusal to believe.

              In the broadest form, if someone (like a child before indoctrination) has never heard of theism, he doesn't believe it and is atheist. If someone is aware of it but hasn't pursued it and doesn't believe it he is an atheist. If he doesn't know what to believe or thinks it is impossible to know and doesn't believe the theism he is actively an atheist. If he realizes the lack of evidence or proof for theism and rejects it he is an atheist; and if he rejects it because of a mistaken understanding of the alleged proof he is still an atheist. If he realizes that particular notions of God are self contradictory and therefore incapable of existing he is an atheist -- contradictions do not exist, nor are attempts to "conceive" them coherently meaningful. If he sees the claims as vague and meaningless and rejects the theist claims as cognitively vacuous he is an atheist.

              None of it requires "faith" in anything to not believe theism. Atheism is a lack of belief, not a positive position and requires no burden of proof. The sole exception is someone who mistakenly claims that a coherent, non-contradictory notion of a god cannot possibly exist in addition to refusing to believe the unproven, but that is rare because coherent, non-contradictory notions of gods are rare, and do not include the Christian God. They are also irrelevant and have little to do with theism because vague, non-committal claims renaming god to mean some unspecified aspect of nature without the supernatural trappings are not what is meant by religion. But the burden is always on the theist to meaningful describe what he is talking about, without contradictions and fallacies, and then to prove it without fallacies.

              There have been different usages of the word 'atheism' with different degrees of narrowness, mostly because of theists trying to impose a burden of proof, but regardless of word usage, the rational concept employed by Ayn Rand is not a "clever" evasion of logic or "copout" and obviously does not require "faith". The evasions are by those with a religious mindset taking their fallacies and fantasies as the starting point and demanding that someone who doesn't buy it has to prove an incoherent negative.

              Just as obvious is that rejecting theism does not mean refusing to ask or sanction scientific questions about how the universe came to be as it is -- provided that is not converted into the equivocation of the religious, primacy of consciousness fallacy of demanding an "explanation" for a "source" of existence in terms of non-existence, which incoherently steals the concepts "explanation", "design" and "non-existence".
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            • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
              Some might argue that George Southwell was the first to define atheism in the way that Rand does, in 1842.

              http://www.positiveatheism.org/writ/s...

              Certainly no one prior to Rand defined atheism in her way as succinctly as you quoted her. “There is no evidence of a creator, so there is no reason for me to believe in one, so I don’t.”

              On the agnosticism vs. atheism issue, the Atlas Society web site states, "Agnosticism—as a general approach to knowledge—refuses to reject arbitrary propositions. This is the general position behind the agnostic approach to the question of God's existence. Agnosticism holds that claims should be evaluated on the basis of evidence, and that claims should not be rejected unless there is sufficient evidence against them (in other words, a claim should not be rejected outright even if no evidence exists either to support or refute it).

              The primary problem for the agnostic is that he allows arbitrary claims to enter his cognitive context. The fully rational man, on the other hand, does not seek evidence to prove or disprove arbitrary claims, for he has no reason to believe that such claims are true in the first place."

              I reject atheism because I do not accept the premise that no evidence exists. The very existence of what exists begs for an explanation for both how and why it exists.
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              • Posted by Zenphamy 9 years, 10 months ago
                j, I would argue that atheism has been a significant part of the makeup of numerous men since the dawn of mankind. Its how we have advanced technologically as far as we have.
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              • Posted by $ CBJ 9 years, 10 months ago
                RE: "The very existence of what exists begs for an explanation for both how and why it exists." To go back to my earlier statement, existence must logically precede causation. Without existence, no causation is possible. The very questions "how" and "why" presuppose existence.
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                • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
                  Yes, the notion that existence is evidence of religious dogma is preposterous. It shows a subjectivist mindset willing to arbitrarily claim anything as "evidence" for whatever someone wants to believe.
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                • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
                  Do you regard the big bang theory at least at the level of accepted theory? If so, then the universe had a beginning. By that logic, existence exists now, but it has not always existed, in which case your argument regarding existence being prior to causation falls apart.
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                  • Posted by $ CBJ 9 years, 10 months ago
                    “It is not true that Big Bang theory holds that existence started at some point in time, or that existence emerged out of non-existence. Rather, it holds that something very different from matter as it exists today, and perhaps operating by physical laws different from physical laws as they are today, existed before the Big Bang, and caused the Big Bang (this pre-Big-Bang existence is usually referred to as "the Primeval Atom"). While some have interpreted Big Bang theory as holding that existence emerged out of non-existence, or as confirmation of the religious idea of creation by God, these are fringe interpretations. Mainstream Big Bang theory, as widely accepted, does not in any way challenge Objectivist ideas.”
                    – Eyal Mozes, “Existence, Time, and the Big Bang.” Atlas Society website
                    http://atlassociety.org/commentary/co...

                    "To grasp the axiom that existence exists, means to grasp the fact that nature, i.e., the universe as a whole, cannot be created or annihilated, that it cannot come into or go out of existence. Whether its basic constituent elements are atoms, or subatomic particles, or some yet undiscovered forms of energy, it is not ruled by a consciousness or by will or by chance, but by the Law of Identity. All the countless forms, motions, combinations and dissolutions of elements within the universe — from a floating speck of dust to the formation of a galaxy to the emergence of life — are caused and determined by the identities of the elements involved."
                    – Ayn Rand, “The Metaphysical Versus the Man-Made”, in Philosophy: Who Needs It.
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                    • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
                      I can accept the idea that existence at one point existed in a way very different from what it has since a big bang. I cannot accept that the emergence of life is caused by the identities of the elements involved. As a nanotechnology researcher who specializes in self-assembly of nanomaterials (including several of those associated with life like collagen and hydroxyapatite), I never have heard of anyone reporting the emergence of life without transplanting that life from somewhere else, ... and I never will, and neither will anyone else. It truly takes faith to accept the emergence of life from inanimate objects, more than I have and anyone should have.
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                      • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
                        Why not it's just a big chemistry and physics experiment. Do it right and a fire is produced. Who knows what's floating around in the air. The Creator hasn't bothered to find it necessary for me to know that. I don't bother the creator with dead ends I like the recycled creation theory after that I quit worrying about that over which I have no control and that which does not affect me either way..
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                      • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
                        Nanotechnology does not justify religious dogma on life. Your inability to "accept" non-religious possibilities does not make science an act of faith. The record of evidence implies that life in very primitive forms did evolve from inanimate matter. If those primitive cell-level forms of life came from something other than what we know as matter, there is no known evidence of it.
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                      • Posted by $ CBJ 9 years, 10 months ago
                        Synthetic biologists appear to be closing in on constructing totally artificial life forms. A synthetic genome has successfully been created that can replicate within empty bacterial host cells.
                        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthet...

                        According to complexity theory, given an appropriate environment, a complex system or structure can spontaneously arise from the combined interactions of simpler structures or elements. Complexity scientists refer to this process as “self-organization” or “emergence.” Stewart Kauffman’s 1996 book, At Home in the Universe, discusses how life could have emerged in this context.
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                        • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
                          I am familiar with Craig Venter's work. When such artificial DNA can self-replicate in a non-biological host, then it could be reasonably called an artificial life form. Venter's synthetic genome work is almost as landmark a development of the genome sequencer before that.
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            • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
              Can you show evidence that she did not? The elephant analogy is unfortunatel It's the fiefdom of George Soros and George Lakoff. Automatically suspect.
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          • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
            However I could just as easily argue for the opposite stating the same observations. Why is the concept of matter creating itself absurd? Why could there not be one act of nature following it's own actions that triggered intelligence? So far it's seems a statement of denial that is a tad bit absurd. Not that it truly matters. Only if 'the creator' demanded payment for the gift of life or reason in some form or the other and gave it some value not just an excuse.

            I said not that it truly matters. In the great scheme of things one truth is that if there is a Supreme Being and that Supreme Being wanted me to be to act or believe in a certain way He/She/It would have created one of us to be the discoverer or inventor of such a way.

            We find out that one of the Staph bacteria (Staphyloccus Epidermidis far from being the bodies immune systems to defeat it's cousins. Without such discoveries it would be killed along with it's family with the opposite result. Or the same with the substance floating in the air that allows bread to rise - yeast a fungus can cause infections as well.

            Or the simple kitchen match.

            So it's enough to thank those who search such things out and refine them into practical use. Thank you Mr. Edison implies a thank you to whatever caused him to invent the incandescent light bulb.

            But to agree to that one has to accept the opposite, yeast infections or staphs. Does that imply a dark supreme being make the supreme being concept a fallacy?

            Render unto Ceasar....and concentrate on what has been bestowed. Which brings us back to Socrates versus Plato.
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            • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
              "Why could there not be one act of nature following its own actions that triggered intelligence?" My response is that of Cheryl Taggart regarding Rearden Metal, " “But the iron ore and all those other things were there all the time. Why didn’t anybody else make that Metal, but Mr. Rearden did?”" My point is that all of the items in the universe did not got there by a series of cosmic accidents. They required thought and creativity.

              Regarding the ability to discover the existence or will of a supreme being, I am not going to make the claim (that Christians and Jews do) that there is a prescribed way for doing so.
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              • Posted by Dobrien 9 years, 10 months ago
                "If you want to find the secrets of the universe, think in terms of Energy, Frequency and Vibration." Nickola Tesla
                Resonance is energy transfered from sound
                Through vibration .
                528 hz is a frequency that is shown to repair DNA .UCLA lab.
                528 hz is what the sun resonates
                Green grass same resonance.
                Solfeggio Scale do-396Hz re-432Hz me-528Hz Fa-639Hz so-741Hz la-852Hz
                Our hearts resonate at 258Hz 33 harmonics or 32 overtones above the earths 7.83 Hz resonance confirmed in 1954 known as the "Schumann resonance"
                5280 feet in a mile

                Symbolically very important 33/32 33 feathers left wing 32 feathers right wing on the American eagle on the dollar bill - 33degree Scotish Freemason-- runway 33 at Cape Canaveral angled 33 degrees west from due north the only runway there. - tree of life 33 circles and pathways -33 miracles performed
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                • Posted by Steven-Wells 9 years, 10 months ago
                  I don't follow the 33 magical number point. Perhaps I'm intellectually unviable.

                  I won't even ask how 5,280 feet in a mile has something to do with resonance, because it doesn't.
                  The foot and the mile both come from simple human anatomy, but use different scales..

                  A "foot" of length (guess how the word was picked) was derived from the length of a human foot, set to its precise size originally per a (presumed) noble foot.

                  And the word "mile" comes from the Latin word for 1,000. Its length comes from the standard measured step in which Roman legions paced off the Roman empire. Try it yourself. March left-right-left-right. From one step of the left foot to the next will be close to 5.28 feet, the double stride unit of measure. One thousand of those paces became the mile. The Romans were very effective at pacing distances to their standard.
                  So a mile is merely a metric multiple of a standard legion step, at a reasonable scale for the kinds of distances foot soldiers and horseback riders would find useful.
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                  • Posted by Dobrien 9 years, 10 months ago
                    I just find it a very interesting coincedence that 528Hz Is such a prevalent and important frequecy and our anatomical march match that number
                    Leads me to believe some Ancient people were
                    Very advanced.
                    As to The 33/32 symbol examples, I believe it refers to our hearts reasonance above the Schumann resonance and the importance there of to modern Freemasons as well as people thousands of years ago.
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                    • Posted by Steven-Wells 9 years, 10 months ago
                      Should we presume the ratio: is the average human two-step gait divided by the average human foot length equal to 528? It might be. That would be an intriguing biometric experiment. Regrettably, I don't have the time or resources to perform that experiment on my own. I'll leave that as an exercise for someone's doctoral dissertation.

                      By the way, what physical property of the sun resonates at 528 Hz? The acoustic behavior of sound in air hardly models the properties of the surface plasma of the sun.
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                • Posted by Dobrien 9 years, 10 months ago
                  Why does Tesla get a thumbs down? He invented or discovered Alternating Current ,wireless telegraphy ,
                  Remote control . World changing inventions.
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                  • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
                    I got bogged down on the 33 renditions of 33 and skipped ahead.

                    Each nautical mile originally referred to one minute of arc along a meridian around the Earth. It's a scientific term dealing with time and navigation.
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              • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
                The same thing said about the light bulb. The difference was the presence of the genius of Edison. Those are natural items that invented into something else therefore not natural but man made.

                But why not cosmic accidents or better put happenstance. Because it takes forever - pun intended - Add a thinking reasoning human being or humans in being and the odds of time doing it are shortened. Serendipity loses out to Synergy.
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        • Posted by blackswan 9 years, 10 months ago
          Exactly, so it's time to drop this. We know we're here, and that there is a universe around us. That's all. We don't know how we got here, from the beginning, so it's a waste of time to go around and around on this. Those who choose a God to explain origins, and those who choose chance to explain origins, both have the same problem of "proof." Since origins can't be proven, let's stop wasting time arguing about something that we can't settle, and just go with "existence exists," and leave it at that. Some will pray, and others will pat themselves on the back, and all will agree to disagree on this. Besides, the argument about God isn't about whether or not He exists, but about the rules that have been implemented, referring to Him as the author. Clearly, compared to most religious dogma, Ayn Rand's objectivism blows them out of the water. THAT's what's important, not an argument about origins.
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          • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
            The question of how the universe evolved is one of science, not philosophy. But the fallacies of the religious creation dogma are intertwined with the rest of philosophy and psychology. The original post started with requirements for achieving happiness on earth and the role of religion in that, not Creationism, but in addition to a supernatural metaphysics and primacy of consciousness over existence, religion equates faith and subjectivism with the means of knowledge and ethics and self purpose with a duty to sacrifice for another world, and leads to enormous psychological damage from religious indoctrination - including inculcation of original Sin and psychology of religious thinking processes, and a sordid history of political and military persecution and war.

            Those who mostly think and behave like ordinary Americans in their personal lives, while otherwise paying lip service to religion and vaguely believing in some creation having nothing to do with ordinary life, escape most of the damage -- they are not living out the original religious Dark Ages, especially those attracted to Ayn Rand -- but the the philosophical corruption continues to influence politics for the worst, especially through the influence of altruist sacrifice equated with ethics. Those who take religious thinking seriously are limited in being able to understand and consistently apply a philosophy of reason, regardless of how "Ayn Rand's objectivism blows [religion] out of the water". The aspect that should be "dropped" is not discussion, but the obsessive promotion of religious fallacies on a forum for Ayn Rand's philosophy of reason.
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      • Posted by Mamaemma 9 years, 10 months ago
        Thank you for answering. So for you to "become an Objectivist" you would have to become an atheist. I can understand why an Objectivist would feel that a person proselytizing for a particular religion would be out of place in the Gulch. My thought about the origin of reality is "I don't know". I can't call myself an atheist, but I've never been down voted for that. Not yet.
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        • Posted by $ allosaur 9 years, 10 months ago
          I have. I am unintimidated by it.
          Call me a mystic if you wish. I have looked up "mysticism" and have read it defined that the word covers all religions.
          Recently I was not at all impressed when a so-called Objectivenist dissed a lady Christian here by calling her a zombie.
          She left the Gulch over that, though she came back to say "Happy Easter" to me last night. I asked her to stick around but don't know if she is going to.
          I have been influenced by Ayn Rand and this board since I had Netflix mail me AS1 and the others I never heard of her before then. Thought I was renting science fiction.
          Way before that, I became a "born again Christian" during my 20s. I turned 69 last week and I ain't ever going to disbelieve in God.
          So I'm wondering-- is this board supposed to be an atheists only club with no one else to be tolerated?
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          • Posted by Mamaemma 9 years, 10 months ago
            Allosaurus, this very question was addressed in some detail before. My conclusion was that I can't consider myself a strict Objectivist unless I am an atheist, which I am not; nevertheless I feel very welcome here, and I feel that my comments and contributions are appreciated by many. I know you are appreciated and respected here.
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            • Posted by $ allosaur 9 years, 10 months ago
              Thanks. I've already picked up on your last statement as holding water.
              Still, I weather splashes now and then.
              I'm retired from being a corrections officer at a maximum security prison for 21 years.
              I can take some rough weather. In fact, I'm kinda used to it.
              I just got irritated over a Christian woman with a different background than I for having to take heat just for stating what church activities she and her husband had planned for Holy Week.
              The post she responded to was about Easter.
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          • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
            Please cite exactly what post saying what was "dissed" by a "so-called Objectivist" that elicited what response calling her a "zombie" for what. These after the fact characterizations in terms of re-writes combined with denouncing are often politically self-serving misrepresentations.
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            • Posted by $ allosaur 9 years, 10 months ago
              I went and took a look and it appears everything Suzanne and responses to her statement about what she and her hubby would do at church during Holy Week has been edited out in the "What Is Easter?" post.
              I can't cite erased for sanitized history.
              Yesterday I replied to a PM that asked why did Suzanne leave the Gulch.
              I stated that being called a zombie really stuck in her craw. In other words, she could not cope with that..
              I'm suddenly reminded of what I used to hear about Alabama Department of Corrections incident reports: "If it is not written it did not happen."
              I guess in the Gulch that also goes for things edited, erased and deleted,
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          • Posted by Steven-Wells 9 years, 10 months ago
            Okay, I wish to call you a mystic. I, myself, am a hard-core atheist. Born once, and that was quite sufficient.

            I swear to god I'm an atheist (a word joke) and have effectively been one for most of my 60-something years. During my very early years (say, up to 7 years old), I hadn't thought much about the topic, other than that IF there was a god, he did a lot of mean and stupid things. Since then, I have never understood the belief in deities by other than third-world un-sophisticates, but it happens a lot. As long as others don't force their mysticism on me (particularly by law) I'll be okay.

            I would not abandon this forum, nor should you, merely because some portion of the members are variously atheist, theist, deist, pantheist, or what have you. Many people here are good people with sound arguments that are worthy of consideration, regardless that some notions about religious topics (from either side) may be looked on with disdain.
            So, no, this is not an atheist-only club, and your opinions are welcome, at least by me, and surely by many others of differing beliefs or non-beliefs.
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        • Posted by richrobinson 9 years, 10 months ago
          I have always thought that it is best to say "I don't know" when we don't know. Makes us ask questions and seek more information. Helps us grow intellectually.
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          • Posted by khalling 9 years, 10 months ago
            I do not think of it as something to "not know about". but more important to the question-you don't wake up one day and decide you are a an Objectivist. like what-baptism? It is a philosophy you study, are a student of. That's all. If you agree the philosophy makes sense to you and you can incorporate objective reason into your life and your choices, I guess over time you say I am an O, like you would say, I'm Aristotelian.
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            • Posted by richrobinson 9 years, 10 months ago
              I was thinking more broadly. If we don't know definitively how the universe began for example why not just say we don't know.
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              • Posted by khalling 9 years, 10 months ago
                it assumes one thinks the concept is important enough, objectively speaking, to entertain. like astrology or ghosts
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                • Posted by richrobinson 9 years, 10 months ago
                  If I see a ghost or aberration I can't explain I may say i saw a ghost. Some would try and explain that it is the "spirit" of some person who lived and died in that location. I would say I don't know how to explain what I saw. I would be open to more scientific explanations but without something definitive I would say I don't know.
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                • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
                  The origin of the universe, or at least where we come from, is a question that any philosophy should either answer or admit that it does not have an answer for at this time. The comparison to astrology or ghosts is not a good one, unless you are willing to consider the possibility that we are a colony of some far off planet. That is a possibility I am willing to consider, and is why I am interested in NASA's efforts to find life elsewhere in the universe.
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                  • Posted by BeenThere 9 years, 10 months ago
                    "The origin of the universe,...."
                    My conclusion: No origin is required, it simply is; existence exists, it always has been and ever shall be.............ponder it, examine it, investigate it (as our rational faculty acquires the means to do so), explore it, deal with it.
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                    • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
                      But unfortunately that is not consistent with the physics of the universe as currently known. The universe does appear to have a beginning and is currently predicted to have an end, albeit far after our existence (at least in current form).
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                  • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
                    Existence as such does not "come from" anywhere. Existence is everything that is, has been or will be. There is no place outside existence for anything to come from, let alone existence itself.

                    The question of how the universe as it is now evolved is a scientific question, not for "philosophy to answer" as speculation -- which is the religious mindset, not objectivity. In particular, JB's speculations, previously pushed on this forum and claiming that to account for the complexity of the physical universe space aliens created it, are a bizarre Creationism through Space Aliens invoking the fallacy of the religious "Argument from Design". It is not science, not rational philosophy, and has nothing to do with NASA and whether or not there is other life in the universe.
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                    • Posted by BeenThere 9 years, 10 months ago
                      "Existence as such does not "come from" anywhere. Existence is everything that is, has been or will be. There is no place outside existence for anything to come from, let alone existence itself."

                      "The question of how the universe as it is now evolved is a scientific question,......."

                      Agree with both.
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                    • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
                      "There is no place outside existence for anything to come from, let alone existence itself." This is the foundational premise around which atheism, as Rand defines it, is based. Epistemologically speaking, "How do you know that?"
                      The answer is that it is the best answer that you have at this time, but at this time, you cannot know whether "There is no place outside existence for anything to come from, let alone existence itself." with undeniable certainty. Thus I will classify this as a premise, NOT an axiom.

                      One of the more intense debates in physics currently is the possibility of multiple universes. If such a concept is considered, then the possibility of the existence as we know it could indeed come from a parallel universe. Such a concept has been formulated into a testable hypothesis.

                      http://www.sciencealert.com/the-paral...

                      I await the answers, and I think I will find them out during my lifetime.

                      However, the Objectivist philosophy forces (word chosen carefully) us to reject the possibility of multiple universes (or the possibility of Earth being a colony of an ancient, distant world) because it allows an arbitrary claim to enter an Objectivist's cognitive context. This automatic rejection of "arbitrary claims" is what I find most unscientific about Objectivism, and is my reason for not being a student of Objectivism. When there is data that is currently unexplained or data for which the underlying cause is unknown, a scientist will formulate and test a range of possible hypotheses, eliminating those that are inconsistent with the data as properly designed experiments are conducted.
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                      • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
                        There is no "outside of existence". It is a contradiction in terms.

                        No scientific theory can contradict the concept of existence. Whatever the rationalistic "multiverse" speculation winds up as, nothing can be "outside existence".

                        Valid science does not proceed through the literally abitrary. A "range of hypotheses" is not the "arbitrary".

                        There are a lot of reason you refuse to learn and understand what Ayn Rand's philosophy is. You are no doubt correct that your desire for the aribtrary is one of them. But it isn't science.
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                      • Posted by Maritimus 9 years, 10 months ago
                        Hello J,
                        There is a problem, in my opinion, in how you use your terms. For instance, you seem to equate universe and existence. If you are allowing the possibility of multiple universes, then you must redefine the term universe. To my understanding, existence means EVERYTHING that exists. In your view of multiple universes, I see just more than one "system", each of which has some as yet unknown delimiting physical characteristic, analogous to a multiplicity of planetary systems within a galaxy.
                        I am not completely sure, because I did not take enough time to think about it. But my strong impression is that these kinds of "definitional shifts" in your expressions are consequences of your, seems to me, firm belief in the concepts of supernatural and extra-existential as valid concepts reflecting a reality. Needless to say, I disagree with you on this.
                        Please, I have no personal animosity here. From what little I know about your work, I think that I admire you for that.
                        Also, I sense an emotional reaction in you toward disagreeing statement. It reminds me of what I learned very long time ego. You cannot deny religion to religious people without causing anger. An illustration, tragically, might be in how the global warming deniers are treated in our culture and country these days. Or, try to disagree with Stalin about communism. Dogmas.
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                        • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
                          Admittedly, I am a deist. I do not accept unearned guilt. I am not angry or hurt in any way. Based on what you say, we will politely disagree, as I am sure I will politely disagree with atheists in this forum who are polite.
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                          • Posted by Maritimus 9 years, 10 months ago
                            Hello J,
                            I am delighted. In a response to anther of your comments, I tried, a minute ago, to propose also the polite disagreement. At least I think I did. Did you see it and agree? All the best.
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              • Posted by Dobrien 9 years, 10 months ago
                I thought that's what a theory is ....
                The best conclusion (simplified) of the unknown.
                If it's a theory it is not conclusive is it?
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                • Posted by richrobinson 9 years, 10 months ago
                  Theory yes. Saying you know for sure, for example, God created man or God didn't create man to me is wrong because we don't know.
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                  • Posted by $ CBJ 9 years, 10 months ago
                    “I don’t believe it,” rather than “I don’t know,” is a legitimate answer to any arbitrary claim for which no real evidence is given. For example, which response is more appropriate for the claim that “The human race was created by pink giraffes on the dwarf planet Pluto”?
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            • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
              Self-declaration of being an Objectivist has never been sufficient for being an O. There are quite a few people in the Gulch that consider themselves O's, or even students of Objectivism, who have been told numerous times (probably rightly so) that they are not.
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          • Posted by $ blarman 9 years, 10 months ago
            Well said. The true search for knowledge does not begin under the auspices of preconceived notions. We must be willing to posit anything, eliminate the unsound, and accept whatever remains as the truth - however inconvenient. (Thanks to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle via Sherlock Holmes.)
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        • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
          Both those aligned with Peikoff and those aligned with Kelley are in agreement on the atheism issue. It would be hard for someone to be accepted as an Objectivist, even if they were accepted as a valued member of the Gulch, without being an atheist.
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        • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
          We are in agreement, mamaemma. I, on the other hand, have been downvoted many times, mostly about a year ago, for taking the "I don't know" position regarding the origin of reality.
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      • Posted by plusaf 9 years, 10 months ago
        Blank-Out?! Hardly!

        If your issue is " It is far easier for me to conclude that a being of superior intelligence and power is responsible for the universe than it is to not conclude that." you're in the wrong place.

        We're not here to find Easy Solutions.

        And if anything, atheism 'believers' or should I say 'followers' or use some other word?.. tend to be VERY "scientific" if they're like ME at all!

        We're looking for proof. Evidence that could/would/Might Explain the "where did it all come from?" question! Any other "easy answer" is going to be a belief in an explanation that's not provable other Than By Faith, and at least for me, that's No Proof At All.

        Science (scientists) are very curious and have put tons of energy (no pun intended, maybe) into trying to Answer That Class of Question!

        There are hints and conflicting data on the subject, and there's no consensus, agreement or anything of the sort, YET.

        If THE Answer Is Discovered, this atheist will decide for himself if the proof is valid (and hopefully will agree,) and the Question Will Be Answered.

        If the answer is God Did It, atheists will be out of business completely, but I'd Love to see That Proof!! If scientific experiments, theories and proofs really make it look like God DIDN'T Create It All.... Well, shit, guys... the religious Believers won't change Their Beliefs at All!!!

        I find the discussion hilarious.
        Enjoy! :)
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      • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
        Unfortunately the term world view has been so pre-empted as to be immediately distrusted as PC Terminology. then you give yourself away as Platoist. the answer is of course 'life is.' just as existence is or A is A.
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        • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
          To be honest, I don't know enough about Plato. I agree the term is "PC", but it is probably the best shorthand for describing how I integrate my own experiences and those throughout history (including recent history in the Gulch and in science) into an understanding that is as consistent as I can make it.
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          • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
            It shows. It's PC it isn't objectivism and wasn't written by Ayn Rand. The Plato method is philosophy 101 for most of us. Aristotle begat Plato and Socrates. Plato begat fairy tales instead of facts. Socrates did the opposite. The Plato or Playdough method holds that there is a special class that is suited to rule and currently is the method of choice for secular progressives etc. Socrates as refined became three rules. Existence Is.Test observations and determine their worth and usefulness never quit testing. and third develop a moral value system and apply it. Lakoff is not a suitable perSON to emulate
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            • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
              I despise secular progressives. I know enough about Lakoff to know that I reject him thoroughly. I certainly don't agree with the idea that there is a special class suited to rule.

              The Socratic method is what I have always followed, long before I had ever heard of Rand.
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              • Posted by Steven-Wells 9 years, 10 months ago
                I am curious. I see the term "secular progressive" as a unit in constant and abundant use throughout media, politics, and elsewhere (such as your comment). Lots of condemnation of secular progressives. Do you consider that secular persons must be progressives or that progressives are secular? Do you despise secular persons generally? What about born-again Christian Progressives?

                Personally, I sneer with disdain and contempt at Progressives. But I don't see how secular vs non-secular carries so much weight in the media, politics, etc. Would you consider me to be evil (or Progressive) because, for example, I want courts to honor honesty as a virtue rather than the commands of some particular religion?
                If I am on a jury deciding a civil matter, should my judgment process rest, as some courts display with prominence, on which of the parties at odds had chosen to "remember the Sabbath"?

                Yes, I fully understand that you are not responsible for the rampant use of "secular progressive" throughout the media. But you linked them, so I'm asking.

                Given that I am secular, but not a progressive, do you despise me, half despise me, reserve judgment until you know more about my character, consider me to be an argumentative pain in the ass (I am—it's true), or what? Just curious.
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                • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
                  Secular progressives are their own category, distinct from religious progressives or from secular Objectivists, or any other combination of two words that are not secular progressives. Secular progressives generally consider themselves as fit to rule, and that is precisely their goal, to rule.
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                • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
                  There is a long history of religionists smearing atheism as inherently evil. When the religionists had the upper hand politically they viciously persecuted atheists in just such terms. It's no surprise that they employ the same mentality when denouncing progressives; it's their way of emotionally nailing down their condemnation even though it has nothing to do with the evil of progressivism (and as you noticed, the fact of the religious left theology). Same for rejecting godlesscommunists (one word) without regard to the nature of communism -- including its incorporation of religious altruist ethics.
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                • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
                  Two in one day counting the thread of PC. Excellent. If you want an in depth look at SP, want to spend the $10 and have kindle on your computer Go look at George Lakoff's book on Don't see the elephant or something like that. Everything you wanted to know about dumbed down in it's final form.It's their operatives handbook for those able to operate meaning not those from Colorado, California or Oregon.

                  Persnally I eschew secular or religious falling back on the old First Amendment guarantee of freedom and implied freedom from religion in government.

                  Christian versus Secular? What's the difference? Shall we cut to the chase and use abortion as an example. One side wants to use that procedure up to enrollment in first grade and the other bans the procedure for prospective parents back as far as puberty.

                  Neither side is going to get their way.

                  The latest ruling seems to be working except among those who haven't bothered to take notice of the latest ruling. For them......!? Interrabang they are a distinct minority who can't make up their minds which of 50 choices they have for colonization.

                  Why is secular progressive rampant? Read their Handbook to Life As the New Soviet Serf, have a decent laugh then get back to reality.

                  While your at it turn off ABC, CBS, NBC and the rest of the former main stream media or in anti SecProg anti PC speak 2MF. (Major Middle Finger.)
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    • Posted by ewv 9 years, 10 months ago
      It's not intriguing, just the usual Rationalistic subjectivism entirely contrary to Ayn Rand's philosophy. The proper starting point for believing anything is small 'o' objectivity: Is it true or false? One cannot "become an Objectivist" (or a scientist) on any other grounds. Calling belief a "worldview" in an attempt to evade the nature of "belief" is Rationalism in the traditional manner of Descartes, Kant and Hegel. A "worldview" is belief about the world; principles are true or false and so is a philosophy. A rational philosophy is not determined by deciding in advance to adhere to a subjective concoction of a "world view" locked up as a mental "model" inside your head.

      JB has done this several times in the past, talking about "deciding" to "become" something without first understanding first what it is, let alone if it is true. Objectivism isn't joining, or adherence to, a competing religious sect. You don't decide to "commit" and then begin rationalistically thinking in terms of it. You understand principles and why they are true or you don't, and you don't believe more than you know at any stage of learning and knowledge.

      He has also described Objectivism as an abstract "structure" and "deductive system" as its big virtue, as if it were a free floating mental construct. That is pure Rationalism. Ayn Rand's philosophy has a hierarchical structure because of what it is, based on facts that give rise to the concepts and principles. It is not "deduced" from First Principles.

      Ayn Rand's ethics is based on the nature of human requirements to use one's mind in order to live. The standard is human nature; the goal is happiness. She did not make pronouncements which, if dutifully followed in accordance with a subjective "worldview", result in success. That is the religious approach. Whether or not one achieves happiness as a state of mind depends on rational choices and effort, correctly, consistently and habitually applied across time. Happiness, as depicted in the heroes of Ayn Rand's novels, is the state of consciousness resulting from achieving one's goals in reality across the course of your life and despite setbacks, not a result of belief in "worldview" or temporary pleasures turning on and off in the range of the moment,

      The spectacle of someone who thinks of himself as a scientist and admirer of Ayn Rand proceeding to rationalistically decide in advance whether to "become an Objectivist" -- by deciding on a commitment to a "worldview", in advance of understanding and without regard to what is true, in order to attain inexplicable happy consequences -- is not intriguing, it's sad. No one can understand Ayn Rand's philosophy, let alone become a person who lives by rational principles, with such a subjectivist, Rationalistic approach.
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    • Posted by jimjamesjames 9 years, 10 months ago
      Again ,by definition, a belief is neither truth nor fact. I try to never use the word "believe," try to use the word "think" in all my conversations.

      Beliefs can be chosen evidenced by those who convert from one religion to another. My issue is, if I am going to "believe," which beliefs improve my quality of life, adds to my ability to function in the world, allows me to think when needed, gives me the most "margin" to function. (Thoreau said, "I love a wide margin to my life.")

      Margin (Howard McCluskey) is the difference between the burdens I bear and my power to carry those burdens. There is so much irrational crap in religion, I simply increase my margin by not considering it.
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      • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
        I do just the opposite. I think is a cop out escape hatch which serves only to a. cast a specious mantle of reasoning ability where undeserved b. provide an escape hatch when proven wrong. If you don't like I believe then try 'I know.' I believe your verbiage being post 1980 is lacking in being useful.Thoreau was a follower of Plato forever looking for excuses. Granting yourself undeserved mystical powers does not earn credibility. It's like saying one and one is seven seven times. It's still one false premise.
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        • Posted by jimjamesjames 9 years, 10 months ago
          Sometimes, I don't "know." So I think.
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          • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
            of course thinking comes first always. research observation testing the ultimate question for anyone Is it Useful now? Then followup testing on continuous basis. Things change.
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            • Posted by jimjamesjames 9 years, 10 months ago
              And thinkers change with the times (and new information), believers don't.
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              • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
                I believe that to be true objectively. Good example. I will vote Donkey because my entire family has voted Donkey since the end of the Civil war...

                I's not the party of Roosevelt, T. anymore but it is the party of anti civil rights and

                that can't be right my family is staunchly pro liberal objectives.

                I just stated one.

                Huh?

                Nor is it the party of FDR and especially not the party of JFK

                You forgot LBJ

                On purpose I'm not much of fascist supporter.

                What about Carter?

                he wasn't much of anything.

                Clinton....uhhhhhhhh hmmmm maybe you have a point.

                Not any better in the dumbo party

                Things change.

                I was very happy to contribute....
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  • Posted by conscious1978 9 years, 10 months ago
    Not quite sure what deciding "to become an Objectivist" means.... Do people that learn Addition do so to become mathematicians? Is learning and integrating any knowledge about existence deciding to become something, or just gaining a better understanding of things? (No sarcasm intended)

    Live your life and continue to learn all you can about what is. We're human...let's be that.
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    • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
      I've been doing that and will continue to learn and integrate new knowledge both to gain a better understanding of things and to develop my next invention.
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  • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
    To be fair shouldn't we turn the question around and ask re Subjectivists happy? Think about It. They have nothing to think about. Do what they are told and think what they are told to think if even that much. Fed constantly changing definitions. Best of all no responsibilities.

    We read philosophy and physics they get fairy tales. What's not to be happy? Good old subjectivism saves the day. Whoever can spin the best yarn is their new hero. Besides they can always blame the other side.. If they can remember who the other side is or was. Definition 1357 went into effect yesterday. It will be replaced on Wednesday.

    Now I'm sure they have their own version.. So to keep it fair remember they use PC dictionaries and are not required to stay on track nor have a clue what about much of anything. It will be difficult but the opportunity should be afforded.

    So are Subjectivists really happy? Start off with What is Happy?
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    • Posted by philosophercat 9 years, 10 months ago
      My estimate 25,000 subjectivists OD on heroin last year and 0 Objectivists. We are a happy bunch. We pursue values ignore the rest. Its actually what the Gulch is supposed to be.
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      • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
        I belieive the phrase is ' overly sensitive' if the glitterati are concerned rather than the more blunt offensive 'addicts.' I like the last half of your comment. so One Up
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  • Posted by $ MikeMarotta 9 years, 10 months ago
    Scale Everyone ME
    Cantril Ladder 68.1 70.0
    Satisfaction With Life 64.5 82.5
    Psychological Well-Being 69.6 75.0
    Health 65.0 62.5
    Time Balance 50.6 75.0
    Lifelong Learning, Arts & Culture 68.3 37.5
    Community 51.6 53.6
    Social Support 69.9 43.8
    Environment 66.6 56.3
    1 / 2 Government 50.5 25.0
    Standard of Living - Economy 65.6 93.8
    Work 59.4 70.8
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  • Posted by librty 9 years, 10 months ago
    In the late 60's I read a lot of Branden and listened to his lectures "The principles of Objectivism" and in the one lecture " The concept of god" there is one basic concept that I took away-that being the law of causality. The law of causality is in the universe or reality just as time and space and matter are in reality. To expect a cause for reality is to misunderstand this concept that existence exists or A=A. Just as there is no beginning without time. And time is in the universe. The universe is not in time. And causality is dependent on this fact also.
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  • Posted by tdechaine 9 years, 10 months ago
    Objectivists have the potential for the greatest happiness. But their beliefs do not guarantee that.
    One has to hold Obj. beliefs sincerely and for the right reasons; e.g. a rational atheist must integrate his position from metaphysical and epistemological facts and premises.

    I agree with Mamaemma: choose rational principles first, then achieve happiness. If you hold irrational priniciples, you can't achieve true happiness.
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  • Posted by $ Thoritsu 9 years, 10 months ago
    I suspect a lot of people will function better with well-defined rules than completely independently. Just look how many deny the ability to develop moral right and wrong objectively. The next set would be those that cannot construct the logical argument for such.

    I agree with khalling. Atheists and agnostics are not a monolithic group. In addition, they are operating without the comfort of faith, without railings so to speak. Therefore, it is not surprising that on average we are a little less happy, having to do a little more work to find our way with a lot less camaraderie, X-mas, easter, etc. Druids are probably happier.too. It doesn't help much that calling oneself an atheist brings raised eyebrows and some shunning from some in the mainstream. Not all of us have the think skin not to care, or to banter on the subject. No doubt this will change as well, as more and more people continue to find religion not believable and unnecessary. It would do us all good to document the objective reasons for proper behavior to provide a logical basis for morality that people can rally around.

    In my case, I made up for the philosophical strain with pets. I am much happier with dogs than dogma.
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    • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
      Denying the ability or taking the action of defining moral values objectively is the Third Rule without that they are not objectivists - although they may have an objective. Al Gore for example along with Michael Moore and George Lakoff of making lots of money... If they are objectivist beyond that they are their own Lucifer.
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    • Posted by $ allosaur 9 years, 10 months ago
      That would include communists who call religion an "opiate of the people."
      Since Ayn Rand slipped out of the grip of such a regime, I find her own atheism to be kinda ironic.
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      • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
        Yet it was Lenin who stated one cannot teach Marxist Economics one must preach it as in a religion. Then admitted it wouldn't serve but decided it would keep them going until long after any one caught on to his admission.
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        • Posted by $ allosaur 9 years, 10 months ago
          I've heard of communism being practiced like a religion. In North Korea we even to have dictator worship.
          I've read and heard conservative commentators state that some, not all, atheists practice their disbelief like a religion, especially those bent on intimidating and suing the very sight of religion, especially the Christian one, out of sight and mind.
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      • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
        Why? Two points. She left before the anti church communist party has fully taken over religion but saw the results of such a move first hand AND

        We used to have such a thing called freedom of and from religion. Far as I'm concerned even commenting on religion, sex, or race is un American starting with the US Government forms. That attitude was pre loss of Constitution and Bill of Rights so it probably means squat anymore. Looks like the leftists just folowed the refugees and started over in the USSA.
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    • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
      Atheists I wouldn't presume to comment but agnostics are those who are still involved in the search for a religion or just religion without a specific church or sect and still believe in a supreme being of some sort. The rest of the mysticism, fear of the dark etc. still applies.
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  • Posted by richrobinson 9 years, 10 months ago
    Interesting. I took the test and it told me to put down any sharp objects and call a sponsor. Happiness is so subjective and fluid I am always skeptical of tests that claim to be able to quantify it. It was intriguing to see how I compared to others. I left my e-mail so I can continue to follow this.
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    • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
      One of the things that intrigued me when I heard about this study from a friend yesterday was something you observed as well: "Happiness is so subjective". Trying to quantify happiness is an attempt to make it more objective. Did I stumble quite by accident upon a contradiction in Objectivist philosophy?
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      • Posted by $ MikeMarotta 9 years, 10 months ago
        You need to define "subjective" and "objective." You seem to accept that "subjective" means "personal" and "objective" means "independent of the observer." That is well enough, but once we speak technically, those definitions are as fallacious as the common notions about "selfishness" and "capitalism."

        If you understand "subjective" as "arbitrary" and "objective" as "in accordance with your best interests" then the seeming contradiction is resolved. Happiness is personal; it is not arbitrary. While slipping on a banana peel is a time-honored gag, laughing at a car accident is not "subjective happiness" but an indication of neurosis, i.e., the non-objective in personal psychology.

        Objective happiness stems from reflections of yourself and your selfhood in the external world.
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      • Posted by richrobinson 9 years, 10 months ago
        Sounds like it. I should have left this in the notes at the end.

        “Contradictions do not exist. Whenever you think that you are facing a contradiction, check your premises. You will find that one of them is wrong.”
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        • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
          This thread is an exercise in checking my own premises, but I have not determined yet which one of them is wrong.
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          • Posted by richrobinson 9 years, 10 months ago
            Good luck Jb. My feeling is that happy and sad people exist everywhere. It seems like collectivist thinking to try and prove one "group" is happier than another.
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            • Posted by $ MikeMarotta 9 years, 10 months ago
              The numbers are what they are. Individuals can differ. We know that they do. Groups still exist. Some people are this and other people are that, and if this and that can be measured, then those are facts.
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            • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
              I agree completely, rich.
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              • Posted by $ MikeMarotta 9 years, 10 months ago
                And I think that all bridges are pretty good and trying to prove that concrete is "better" than steel proves nothing, especially when you can use both in the same structure.

                My point is that your denial of statistical fact is a statement of ignorance.
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                • Posted by richrobinson 9 years, 10 months ago
                  The problem for me is that the answers are subjective and could vary from day to day. Multiply small variances by thousands of responses and the results are meaningless.
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                  • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
                    Objctivism Rule #2 says observe, test and ask is it useful AND THEN keep testing which keeps the results meaningful. After a while most get by the small variances such as how hot is that cast iron skillet in my bare hand?
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          • Posted by Maritimus 9 years, 10 months ago
            The only thing that, at my level of (mis?)understanding things, I can honestly point out for you to reexamine is: why you seem to not accept the eternity existence but seem to accept the eternity of a preexisting creator.
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            • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
              Because in my experience, inanimate things do not create other things. The only life form we know of that is capable of developing complex tools is humanity. Yet there is much in this universe that is beyond our capacity to design, let alone create. This points to a superior, not necessarily infinite in any way, intelligence with powers beyond our own. I don't ascribe eternity or even morality, just creativity, as traits of such an intelligence.
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              • Posted by Maritimus 9 years, 10 months ago
                Hello J,
                "Yet there is much in this universe that is beyond our capacity to design, let alone create."
                It seems to me pretty obvious that this sentence implies that everything needs to be designed or created. Which, to my mind, directly says nothing can be eternal. It also almost defines an intelligent designer or creator. That is what, more or less clearly, all religions say. I do not need to, but want to point out that such ideas are incompatible with the objectivist philosophy. Why not agree on that and part friends as before?
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  • Posted by strugatsky 9 years, 10 months ago
    I am not sure if I agree with the formulation of the question here. Using the Bible's metaphor, once you take a bite of the apple, there is no way back; there is no red pill to bring you back into the Matrix. Of course, one could ask if having the knowledge is a worthwhile endeavor? But the choice could be made only before the knowledge is injected.
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  • Posted by $ TomB666 9 years, 10 months ago
    The question should be "Are students of Objectivism happy?" because Rand stated that she was the Objectivist and all the rest of us (who are so inclined) are students of Objectivism. Knowing that I am and always will be a student is somehow satisfying to me as no one expects a student to get it right all the time. I do wonder just what a passing grade would be? :-)
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    • Posted by $ 9 years, 10 months ago
      Rand was pretty clear on that. Those not in perfect agreement with her were shunned. Shunned probably isn't the right word for it, but I can't think of a better one.
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      • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 9 years, 10 months ago
        sorry that went over your head. You set the passing grade for yourself when you conclude the results of Rule three. no one else. If you have to refer to someone else go back to rule one and start over.
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