One of the reasons we atheists have to be loud and assertive is that we are floating alone in a vast sea of ignorance. Case in point: here is an artist who has obviously never met an atheist.
I am expressing my feeling towards the very Idea of Atheism. I almost pity those who have such beliefs. I’m not saying they are wrong or right. I’m just saying that what they believe in is more depressing than any other possibility.
So I made this simple picture to express my feelings for somebody who believes in nothing.
here we see a person sitting in a blank room without any doors or windows. What is most troubling is the fact that this person wants to be here, and is unwilling to move from his chair. Alone, neglected, and lost to the ravages of time. without anything to grab onto and hold as a symbol of his own identity. Those who seek nothing as a reward shall ultimately receive it.
I don’t think Atheists can even believe in love, which is the saddest part.
If this picture offends you, remember that it is not directed at you. Even if you are an atheist.
Atheists don’t believe in love? Where does this nonsense come from? This fellow is a fool who sits alone himself, imagining what atheists must think, and he conjures up this ridiculous picture based on the idea that atheists are lonely nihilists who believe in nothing. I know a lot of atheists, and no, his portrayal is not accurate.
I’m not offended by the picture — I’m just sickened by the smug ignorance of its creator. There are a lot of comments over there, too, all of which are getting hidden away by the host, which tells us who has got his eyes firmly closed in this debate. I think he needs to retitle his picture to “Self Portrait.”
This atheist simply believes in all that is (which is quite a lot), and doesn’t believe in that which isn’t (which denial, to some theists, seems to represent a complete denial of the universe…which tells us more about their deluded mindset than ours.) Since the artist doesn’t understand that we do believe in something (including love), here’s a short, simple creed for the godless.
An atheist’s creed
I believe in time,
matter, and energy,
which make up the whole of the world.I believe in reason, evidence and the human mind,
the only tools we have;
they are the product of natural forces
in a majestic but impersonal universe,
grander and richer than we can imagine,
a source of endless opportunities for discovery.I believe in the power of doubt;
I do not seek out reassurances,
but embrace the question,
and strive to challenge my own beliefs.I accept human mortality.
We have but one life,
brief and full of struggle,
leavened with love and community,
learning and exploration,
beauty and the creation of
new life, new art, and new ideas.I rejoice in this life that I have,
and in the grandeur of a world that preceded me,
and an earth that will abide without me.
Well, this bit certainly calls for a Python quote:
Oh, it’s not as nn…nnnn…nnn…no…no…noo…not as nasty as something I just thought of, sir.
Considering the rest of their ‘art’ is furry and anime trash, I would not have even bothered posting this.
The artist(?) has it all wrong. For the Atheist (or even Agnostic, where I more fit) there are no walls. The above is the state of the Theist, only there are pretty pictures painted on the walls and the person sitting there thinks it is the real world.
Anyone else find it ironic that the website it called ‘Deviant Art’? Seems like just another sheep to me……
It’s like Plato’s Cavern all over again. This guy seems to think that we’re all just staring at the walls of the cave.
I personally like to think of myself as a thermodynamic miracle. (From Watchmen: Dr. Manhattan’s speech to Laurie while on Mars.)
Doctor Manhattan: Thermo-dynamic miracles… events with odds against so astronomical they’re effectively impossible, like oxygen spontaneously becoming gold. I long to observe such a thing.
And yet, in each human coupling, a thousand million sperm vie for a single egg. Multiply those odds by countless generations, against the odds of your ancestors being alive; meeting; siring this precise son; that exact daughter… Until your mother loves a man she has every reason to hate, and of that union, of the thousand million children competing for fertilization, it was you, only you, that emerged. To distill so specific a form from that chaos of improbability, like turning air to gold… that is the crowning unlikelihood. The thermo-dynamic miracle.
Laurie Juspeczyk: But…if me, my birth, if that’s a thermodynamic miracle… I mean, you could say that about anybody in the world!
Dr. Manhattan: Yes. Anybody in the world. ..But the world is so full of people, so crowded with these miracles that they become commonplace and we forget… I forget. We gaze continually at the world and it grows dull in our perceptions. Yet seen from the another’s vantage point. As if new, it may still take our breath away. Come…dry your eyes. For you are life, rarer than a quark and unpredictable beyond the dreams of Heisenberg; the clay in which the forces that shape all things leave their fingerprints most clearly.
Or I like listening to Carl Sagan’s Pale Blue Dot. Because while he reminds us how small the earth really is, the breadth of the universe just makes my thermodynamic miracle more cool.
Sure, it won’t last forever. Nothing does. But it can be beautiful while it lasts.
Struth! If I had the ignorance of that artist, I certainly wouldn’t want to broadcast the fact. There’s more mystery and beauty in my atheistic world than in any theist’s bumper book of fantasies.
BigBob
I’m not sure this even meets the high standards of “clip art”… let alone any sort of art proper!
I believe in beer and wine and good food. What more does one need?
Without God, Life is Everything.
Enough said.
Janeothejungle: Actually I have an account at DeviantArt too. Sure, it’s a silly name, but it’s actually been a decent resource for newbie artists. Please don’t judge all DeviantArt folk by the one.
He could improve it immensely by retitling it to one word – “PROJECTION”
I don’t think Atheists can even believe in love, which is the saddest part.
There’s a lot of unpack in this very common assumption held by a lot of religious people.
I think at least part of the problem has to do with their misunderstandings of abstractions, and what they are. They think atheists only believe in solid, concrete objects they can hold and observe. They throw that together with “You can’t see love under your microscope, Mr. Smarty Pants Scientist” and they apparently arrive at the conclusion that atheists “can’t believe in love.” It’s a difficultly in dealing with levels of categories.
The other thing that’s interesting about the belief that atheists must not be able to feel love or joy of any kind is the tacit admission that “faith” is really based — not on facts — but on wishes. Happy, optimistic people CHOOSE believe in God: those who don’t, must be unhappy, pessimistic.
Notice how cavalierly the cartoonist says “I’m not saying they’re wrong or right” and quickly moves on to his main point, which is that the view is depressing. Clearly, it’s not really depressing — whether God exists or not wouldn’t effect the existence of all the things in the world that indicated to the believer that God existed in the first place. But in dismissing the importance of whether a view is true or not and focusing only on its personal benefits, the writer doesn’t say much for the warm, loving background from which he thinks ‘faith’ springs. It’s just cold, calculated self-interest, dressed up.
#3 – and, to put on the final touches of turning it into a picture of a Theist, there needs to be a trapdoor on the bottom leading to a lake of fire.
Janeothejungle and Chris A. you are making the same assumptions this artist is. I’m on Deviant Art, it’s just an art site with a strange name (that’s what drew me to it in the first place, pun intended.) I like drawing Anthro characters or Furry to you, it’s just something I like to draw no harm in doing it. The artist is completely wrong but you should not give him/her crap for some art they like to do when the problem is they don’t understand what being an Atheist is.
Best,
Brett Booth
Evidently the author hasn’t grasped the difference between atheists and a certain group of German nihilists.
“We believe in nothing, Lebowski, nothing.”
OMG…an Atheist’s creed!!!!!
made me tingle! love it! Im surrounded by so many theists that I feel like Im the only one out there! Thanks!
I also love the “if this picture offends you, it’s not directed toward you” disclaimer. That way they can make all the stupid statements they want and when called out say “Oh, well YOU weren’t the type I was talking about.”
Hey ! What’s wrong with all of you ? He said : don’t feel offended, the picture is not about you ! He forgot to add that it’s because it is about some kind of ghostly atheist who exists only in his imagination (proof that it’s a ghost : he looks all fuzzy and blurred). So let’s not feel offended !
#11++
Awesome, PZ! I love the ‘Morris Creed’! Or is it the ‘Pharyngula Creed’? In any event, it speaks to me.
-eyesoars
All comments on the piece have been hidden. I think the challenge to his or her perception isn’t being well received.
I fixed it for him!
Here!
It’s on Deviant Art. There’s already no credibility right there. Any little 12 years old schmuck can post ugly stuff on there. And then they feel all big and interesting because they are OMG ONLINE.
Very nicely worded creed. What’s the source?
The artist is happy for the publicity:
thanks to some idiot Atheists who love to take it personally and think by putting me on a quaint little site:[link] that they will hurt my feelings.
Far from it.
Thanks for displaying me like I was some type of Circus freak. My pageveiws have never been higher!
Take away the stool and put the little dude in the lotus-position and you’ve got a decent illustration of satori.
Re: an atheist’s creed
I wanted to follow that up with “Amen”, but somehow that just doesn’t seem right. ;)
I’ll tell you makes me sad. In fact, it scared the hell out of me when I was a little kid (still does). Spending all of eternity in a city with seven gates made of pearls and paved with gold, and the overbearing, demanding Hebrew God as company–now that is frightening.
It’s very, very telling that those who reject fairy tale beliefs are seen as “believing in nothing.”
PZ, that’s a wonderfully written creed. I googled “atheist creed: to see if I could find the author and came up with many “creeds”, ranging from the mildly humorous to the just plain dumb. I want to use it, but have a terminal case of the attribution compulsion. Is it yours?
Best,
Andrew
Wow, so much marvelous nonsense. I almost feel bad when small-minded people fall prey to the scathing scrutiny of Pharyngula readers, and this is no exception. Ignoring the fact that some teenage kid probably put this together, and one who was indoctrinated with nonsense to boot, there is really no excuse for the lack of thought put into it. Apparently the “Idea of Atheism” consists of sitting sadly in a dark little prison believing in nothing. What does that even mean? If only I believed in love, then I would be similarly inclined to understand other people.
Atheists not “believe in love”? I refute it thus: Every time I am with my children, I get loopy with the stuff. When I sing the Flaming Lips song “Do You Realize,” the most beautiful face in the world–that of my girlfriend– appears in my mind’s eye and impels on me the most powerful desire to be with her. Every time I talk to my parents, with whom I have major differences and a sprinkling of resentments, but feel the miles erased by a natural affection and mutual concern, I demonstrate how powerfully an atheist loves. The fact that I acknowledge that love is an epiphenomenon arising from motion and matter and pattern doesn’t diminish in the least the qualia, my experience of it. Unweave your goddamn rainbow, you stick figure hack.
I assume that by “love” this fellow is referring to the the love that comes from a God who threatens us with infinite torture for acting on our God-given sexual urges in an unapproved way.
Why do these theist tracks seem to love using Comic Sans, that infamous and hated font?
Another masterpiece of projection!
But the whole “If this picture offends you, remember that it is not directed at you” is actually true. It’s directed at a delusion that exists only in the artist’s own mind. No connection to the real world whatsoever.
I assume that by “love” this fellow is referring to the the love that comes from a God who threatens us with infinite torture for acting on our God-given sexual urges in an unapproved way.
There’s an out–the human sacrifice of the offspring of God and teenager he raped, and the ritual consumption of that offspring in order to confirm one’s acceptance of the sacrifice.
I’ll take beer.
MissPrism, Hey! Masturbation is a sin, too!
Great creed! Who wrote it? I would like to know because I am going to steal it and would like to give credit to the right person.
The picture reminds me of a old Sagan quote:
“In some respects, science has far surpassed religion in delivering awe. How is it that hardly any major religion has looked at science and concluded, ‘This is better than we thought! The Universe is much bigger than our prophets said, grander, more subtle, more elegant. God must be even greater than we dreamed?’ Instead they say, ‘No, no, no! My god is a little god, and I want him to stay that way.'”
Could anything be more true?
Richard
http://lifewithoutfaith.com
When a theist says an atheist doesn’t believe in love or is not capable of it, ask the theist what love is. You’d be surprised how often love is defined by them in some nebulous airy-fairy magic woo-woo way that essentially makes their claim correct — we atheists don’t believe in that notion of “love.”
Mr. Myers, do you know the name of the author for that Creed? I would very much like to credit them and Google is of no help.
It’s like Plato’s Cavern all over again. This guy seems to think that we’re all just staring at the walls of the cave.
When in fact he’s the one trapped in the cave, staring at the pictures others have put up and which he’s embellished.
I relate to that, and to Nietzsche’s madman.
Atheism isn’t necessarily the great freedom it’s often portrayed to be, certainly not to a lot of people. I’m fine with godlessness now (had reconcile to it, since I wasn’t willing to live a dishonest life), but however much one points and laughs at the narrow-minded silly little picture above, it’s still how godlessness seems to many people. It’s the author’s view of it, probably an honest enough one. It simply doesn’t account for the benefits of living honestly at all.
Of course the text betrays what a mindless little wanker his belief has made him. For, it may be true that an atheist doesn’t “believe in love,” which is because one needn’t “believe first” once one has left behind religion and metaphysics, one simply loves. It’s the old “belief in evolution” mistake these buffoons make, that things must be “believed” to somehow take on reality (kind of like God keeping reality safe by constantly observing it).
Indeed, that’s what leaving religion behind is all about, you not only do science empirically, you live in a kind of empirical existence that is foreign to the “believers.” You accept “reality,” you don’t believe in a reality that you impose upon all experience.
But giving up that magical “reality” that supposedly works if you believe in it is often not easy, and may lead to the kind of despair meant to be depicted in that picture. Science (IIRC) had a recent article about a creationist who learned paleontological science and thus had to give up his creationism. He said that he tried atheism, but he did find it to be too depressing, so he’s a kind of theistic evolutionist. The gains of giving up religion are worth it, at least to many of us, but sometimes the losses are too much for those contemplating the loss of their sky pixie.
We should laugh at the narrow-minded view of this author, but we should not forget that it’s not infrequently the only way these people see the loss of god. The loss of any worldview can be difficult, and the loss of one that seems to animate the universe in a way that science does not can be even more difficult.
Glen D
http://tinyurl.com/2kxyc7
Huh?
Persecution complex? Someone draws an editorial cartoon which shows atheists as unhappy, bitter, unloving “freaks” and he takes reasonable critique as attempts to “hurt his feelings?”
We don’t CARE about you, personally. We’re disputing the theme you were expounding on, and explaining why. If this helps your pageviews, that’s fine. I’m bothered by the IDEAS you express, not YOU. I hope you have a wonderful day, and a happy life. And that we persuade you to change your mind — not drop over and cry.
It really IS all about him, isn’t it? I remember my daughter told me once that someone in her civics class said “I’d consider atheism, but there’s nothing in it for me.” She asked “What do you want — a toaster?”
Nothing about considering what’s true or likely to be true. No. What matters is if it provides the happy.
Sheesh. Get over yourself.
Yes, I also think it’s actually a picture of a theist. But those walls should be made out of bibles (preferably King James version). Perhaps one of our commenters can re-edit it for us?
Of course, imagining yourself, your friends and all of the Universe entirely and inescapably in the grip of a vicious, irrational dictator who sentences people to an eternity of Hell for acting on impulses he gave them in the first place isn’t depressing in the slightest.
Theists: Please at least try to see what life looks like without your imaginery friend in the way – you never know you might even like it!
Nah not a circus freak, just a proudly ignorant little twit.
I beg to differ. This delusion does not exist only in this artist’s mind; this delusion is propogated vigorously by mainstream religion in this country.
His “art” sucks. Extremely poor perspective (that is, his 2D rendering of 3D AND his idiotic view of atheism).
Why are theists so bad at art and creativity in general? There is nothing remotely original or compelling about this ‘art’. It’s as bland and predictable as ‘christian rock’
Well, you won’t find it on google yet, because it is my creed, which is mine, which I just wrote down this morning.
You can expect me to rage when I get home. I’m currently containing it as best I can by playing a continuous loop of “All You Need is Love” by the Beatles in my head. Meanwhile, here’s a link.
Why are theists so bad at art and creativity in general?
Not to get into too huge a war, but: Bach.
(and yes, Christian rock is a vile abomination unto music itself)
I beg to differ. This delusion does not exist only in this artist’s mind; this delusion is propogated vigorously by mainstream religion in this country.
I love that picture! “Rewards for an atheist” is exactly the reason so many people believe in god.
What do you get if you’re an atheist? Eternal bliss? Virgins? A moral code from god? A sexual code ordained by god? (and even better) dirty sex not ordained by god? No.
That’s why people believe in god. For all these extras. You get NOTHING from atheism. Nothing except for one tiny little thing. Truth. That’s all you get. And it’s a lonely little room.
I think the use by the artist of the word “simple” reveals all that we need to know. Though I think one or more of the word’s synonyms would be more appropriate descriptors.
Oops, sorry for double posting. Gotta restart my computer.
Full of fail: the rendering, the message, the intelligence.
Full of win” the Atheist’s Creed. As an agnostic, I also can wholeheartedly identify with it.
I’m not so sure I believe in time. What the hell is it?
Well, for what it’s worth, while, like just about everything else on the internet, DeviantArt has its share of untalented hacks and addle-brained teenagers, there is good stuff therein.
Take for example, Ursula Vernon’s gallery, featuring, among other things, all sorts of wonderful tentacled things. (“Walking the Kraken” among others.)
On accepting human morality: The Fable of the Dragon-Tyrant
I don’t think it has much, if anything, to do with atheism or theism (or agnosticism…), but the “atheist’s creed” starts out rather badly. Just what is it to “believe in time”? That’s almost spookily metaphysical. Also, to believe in _both_ matter and energy seems a bit extravagant, if we’re interested in paring down our ontological commitments. And, since our atheist friend also “believes” (in the warm, fuzzy sense of ‘believes’) in reason and evidence, perhaps the evidence based rationale for believing (in the assertoric sense) in time, matter and energy couled be provided. Half-baked ideas, even if the ingredients are top quality, don’t satisfy the discriminating palate.
The art isn’t even good. Who the heck would want a print of it?
You call that a chair? I demand lumbar support.
(.)(.)
You don’t believe in time? I don’t know exactly what it is, but it sure seems to be passing by. There’s nothing metaphysical about it — but it’s something we do have to deal with.
Commenting on the use of the word Reward:
Even when I WAS religious, I rather thought the idea of doing something good FOR A REWARD defeated the whole point of why you should be good. You shouldn’t be nice to your neighbour because God was preparing your mansion in heaven, you should be nice to your neighbour because, hello, they’re human beings with feelings too. You shouldn’t NOT kill people because God would unleash his wrath, but because it was the only life that person would have.
Which is why I refute the idea that atheists lack a moral compass. An atheist who does good in the world, who strives to make the world a better place without hope of reward, seems pretty damn moral to me. A lot more moral than somebody who does the bare minimum out of fear and hope of a nebulous reward.
I didn’t realise i was here to be rewarded. What absolute arrogance that would be.
I can have more fun quietly using my brain even in an empty room than he will ever have going to church and being told what people want him to think. This just reminds me of the statue “The Thinker”.
“#3 – and, to put on the final touches of turning it into a picture of a Theist, there needs to be a trapdoor on the bottom leading to a lake of fire.”
Ideally, the trapdoor should also be a painting.
The comments section is the funniest thing of course. They always get so hilariously defensive when anyone tries to call them on their BS. Sorry, the “not directed at you” is not a get-out-of-criticism-free card.
At least she didn’t pull the bit about how atheists can’t have morals. That tends to annoy me, the notion that we don’t believe in love is just funny. And the notion that we’re so lonely because we don’t have an imaginary friend is even funnier.
PixelFish and Brett Booth: I’m not bashing the site, merely the fact that someone with that particular outlook would place themselves in the ‘deviant’ category. Let’s look at the bigger picture instead of nitpicking, shall we?
Cheers.
This fellow has obviously not seen PZ and his cephalopods. Speaking of which, isn’t today Friday?!
Bob #59
I believe the lines go together…”I believe in time, matter and energy.”
Heres the reference: Einstein, Albert. “On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies”. Annalen der Physik 18: 639-641
I did go to his site and he lists his interests as “none at the moment”. I so hope that changes. Perhaps in time, if he does take a real interest in something, his work will improve. I’m certainly not the brightest bulb on the chandelier, but every single day of my life has in some way been an investigation of interesting things and ideas.
Seeing his work exhibited, I wish him well, he’s only 21, and his whole adult life is in front of him. But it also makes me wish there were some word for what I do other than “art”.
Well, this’ll probably annoy most people and I almost feel like I’m giving ammo to the “enemy” for even saying so, but I’m gonna have to say that as an athiest, I personally AM kind of the lonely nihilist. But the reason for that is, I guess, I spent so much of my life believing in false promises offered by religion, and now that I’ve lost them, there’s nothing to fill the gap.
That doesn’t mean I’ll start believing in fairy tales or comforting lies to get by. If there was some comforting reality or something I could prove that pointed to an afterlife, I would be happy and content, but there’s not and I’m not going to pretend there is to please myself.
I’ve heard other athiests talk about how they get through life and how they deal with mortality and brain death wiping away our memories and personalities, etc., but what those people find comforting does absolutely nothing for me.
So, I don’t really know what else to say. I guess I’m the nihilist they mention, but I have the problem of not being able to believe a lie, even if it might make me happy.
ani difranco says it for me, Krensada:
but what
what if no one’s watching
what if when we’re dead, we’re just dead
what if there’s no time to lose
what if there’s things we gotta do
things that need to be said
[…]
I mean what
what if no one’s watching
what if when we’re dead, we’re just dead
what if it’s just us down here
what if god is just an idea
someone put in your head
Very sad that you feel the need to use the Bible as a symbol of your identity. There’s so much more out there. Get out of your shell. Don’t fence yourself in. Unlock your mind!
LOL he’s got the comments hidden. What a chicken shit. He’s certainly behaving to stereotype for a Christian and a furry.
I did go to his site and he lists his interests as “none at the moment”. I so hope that changes. Perhaps in time, if he does take a real interest in something, his work will improve.
Maybe he should paint emo-Jesus.
Three ‘I believe’s in the Atheist’s Creed? So Atheism is just another belief system?
I would have to say, his traffic spiked today.
Views
Total: 5,770
Today: 2,931
As for what is sad, believing in a being so petty, it eternally punishes subjects that cannot possible harm it. That’s not love, that’s the Stockholm Syndrome.
Just before Christmas there was a long article in the Franfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ) about TGD, which towards the end asserted that Dawkins can have no appreciation of Mozart because he’s an atheist. Astoundingly presumptuous :- there was not the slightest indication that the FAZ author had any evidence for this. I was surprised to get to the end of the article and find Dawkins hadn’t been accused of having a poor sex life. There’s a tradition of this in England: “Don poor at table, worse in bed, Don that dared attack my Chesterton..”
I’m with the others who think that those who imagine an eternal bliss on the other side are the ones more likely to suffer from a stunted sense of wonder at creation and appreciation of what man has achieved on this side.
Peter
Just before Christmas there was a long article in the Franfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ) about TGD, which towards the end asserted that Dawkins can have no appreciation of Mozart because he’s an atheist.
Funny, last night I was just posting my favorite scene in opera, the finale from Mozart’s Don Giovanni. Guess I’m not really enjoying it since it has Hell and stuff.
You could re-title it “A Life Without Sin” and you’d pretty much capture the ideals of the monastic life.
Just so you know, technically there really isn’t such thing as love. It’s a made up emotion. Typically love is infatuation or attachment; everything else is a cultural invention.
There’s nothing wrong with that, since the idea feels good and makes us happy (which is really all that matters), it’s just a pet peeve of mine to see a fellow Atheist proclaim “Atheists do too believe in love!”
I am looking for some clip art of a man having homosexual sex while claiming to be heterosexual and doing heroin with his “masseuse” with the text “pastor of a mega church”
does anyone know where i can find it?
A masterpiece, PZ. Thank you.
Now all we need is some budding Bach or Mozart to set the Credo to music. Any volunteers? It might help to translate it into Latin first, though, to sneak it past the censors.
“I’m just saying that what they believe in is more depressing than any other possibility.”
This from people who believe that everything that’s wrong with the world (including predation and disease) is caused by our “sin”.
How’s this for non-depressing? Atheists believe in a universe that’s NOT OUR FAULT!
Otherwise, good post, PZ, although note that many Singulatarians are atheists and wouldn’t accept future mortality with any more resignation than you would accept death from a treatable bacterial infection.
Theist Creed
A blind man in a dark room
looking for a black hat
which isn’t there
There’s a difference between “This thing makes sense to me” and “I was brought up to believe in this thing so I believe it even though I’ve never thought about whether it makes sense”.
Che–“Just so you know, technically there really isn’t such thing as love. It’s a made up emotion. Typically love is infatuation or attachment; everything else is a cultural invention.
There’s nothing wrong with that, since the idea feels good and makes us happy (which is really all that matters), it’s just a pet peeve of mine to see a fellow Atheist proclaim “Atheists do too believe in love!””
Are you saying that emotions aren’t real? How can you have a “made up emotion”? If love is attachment, then doesn’t it exist? Aren’t you demeaning the word attachment by suggesting that it doesn’t have value? If love is attachment and attachment exists then love exists.
Your argument is semantic. I “believe” in love because I do love my kids, husband, and a couple other people. If you want to say I’m deeply attached, it’s ok but the argument is still semantics. And really, has nothing to do with athiesm.
Those who are upset by PZ’s use of the term “believe” just need to replace it with “acknowledge.” There – all fixed.
Now all we need is some budding Bach or Mozart to set the Credo to music. Any volunteers? It might help to translate it into Latin first, though, to sneak it past the censors.
I’ve been trying to find a decent video (w/English) of Iago’s “Credo” in Verdi’s Otello. Such awesome evil!
Maybe he should paint emo-Jesus.
Made me laugh out loud. OK, snicker quietly, I’m in an office full of nerdy programmers and sales guys.
October Mermaid, I wish I could offer you something, but I found atheism liberating partially because there’s no afterlife. This is what we’ve got, so let’s get on with making it interesting and enjoyable.
Che, just so you know, there’s no such thing as “music.” Those are just patterns of sound that we recognize and call “music” out of cultural convention.
Dude, don’t be a putz.
Ah, what do you expect from a furry?
More and more I think that religion and belief in a diety in general is simply a desire to remain a child. A child with a loving parent that will never die, will tell you what is right and wrong, hug you when you’re sad, tell you fanciful stories of how thunder is angels bowling and rain is god’s tears etc.
Atheists have simply “grown up” and decided to face the world like an adult. To reason what is right and wrong, to find out what really makes thunder and rain, and to find others to whom to give their love.
This artist is still a child (regardless of his true age)who can’t imagine what it would be like to be an adult without an eternal parent to watch over him and give him everlasting unconditional love. That is what he means when he says, “I don’t think atheists can even know love”. To him, love is what comes from his parents, not an emotion he may feel for another. So he imagines that without god he would not know love, just like a 5 year old would imagine his parents leaving him.
Time to grow up and realize that God really is just Santa Claus for children who only think they are adults.
@80 What are you talking about? Atheists do believe in love.
Happiness isnt all that matters. Were you not reading the rest of the comments? You can be a tool bag theist and still be happy, it doesnt mean that belief system is valid though.
What you are saying is a pet peeve of mine.
In comparison to the transcendant-omnipotent being frozen in the theist mind (and hence, in some ancestral part of my being) it is true that atheists may feel weak and powerless towards the world.
Until they realize that in fact, the power they thought they had through God was just… nothing. It was cowardness and weakness.
So if the atheist is to be drawn in a box sitting on a bench, his back must be straight, and he must be proud of what he is. And if he’s still on the bench, it is only because he was sleeping earlier in the soft, easy-relief, bubble that his theist peers had made for him, at birth.
Why do these theist tracks seem to love using Comic Sans, that infamous and hated font?
Posted by: Plastic Nag
PZ does that to distinguish them from well reasoned quotes.
“An atheist cannot believe in love”
This statement puts me at a loss for words–
I’d really like to see him try to prove
His thesis; clearly it’s absurd.
Imagine, for a moment, God existed–
Omnipotent, Omniscient, Everywhere–
And just as preachers always have insisted,
God indeed was loving, and did care.
This love from God would dwarf our mortal hearts;
Your spouse’s love is nothing next to His.
The whole of human love, the smallest part
Of God’s, for His is all there really is.
I love. That is a fact, not mere façade;
Yes, love exists, which can’t be said of God.
(additional rant at http://digitalcuttlefish.blogspot.com/2008/03/love-love-love.html )
It is no wonder that the religious insane perceives us
atheists as basket cases and themselves as enlightened
and destined for eternal rewards in the ether. I have
never felt more alive and attuned to this temporary state
of random existence than when I finally sloughed off all
religion and embraced atheism, so tuned to the natural
order of everything in the Universe. Atheism is the natural state; religion and all that it insanely entails
comes only later by way of indoctrination and unsound
thinking. To the religiously insane, there is no further
explanation and none will be sought.
The Atheist’s Creed, as offered by PZ could not express
it any more eloquently.
One statement by the retards is so assinine as to be so
incredulous whenever we hear it: “Here lies the Atheist,
all dressed up with no place to go” Though they mean it to
be derogatory, the statement just falls back on them!
That is the point: “No place to go”! The dumb fools see it
as a loss of everything with no hereafter rewards! Leave it
to religion to pose an idea that in effect makes them all
the more ridiculous!
The idea that love is some made-up emotion, or transformation of another drive or attraction, sounds altogether too Freudian to me.
Yes, yes, the satisfied breast-fed baby is really flushed with sexual pleasure, you know, because they’re at the oral stage. Women love their babies as a sublimated sexual attraction, leading to the Oedipal complex, blah blah.
It didn’t have any evidence for it, or make any sense, when Freud first claimed those things, and subsequent study has made it all even less likely than then. “Love” may not be a “single emotion” or anything like that, but it covers a range of states which are quite real, and which go beyond the sublimation of sexual desire (what some like to bring out, people will die for love, they almost never will for sex).
Only in the sense that love is not “one thing alone” would I agree that love is not, say, “a real thing in itself.” However, it certainly applies to real and related states of mind, so it is as real as the collection of parts and systems that we call a “cat.”
Glen D
http://tinyurl.com/2kxyc7
What’s interesting to me is that his comments are a perfect reflection of his religious conditioning.
“I don’t think Atheists can even believe in love, which is the saddest part.”
This isn’t original; it’s just one of the things Billy Graham, Pat Robertson, etc. say. (Billy Graham got knighted for saying stupid shit like this!)
Sunday sermons have been pounding this message into people’s brains for so long that it is taken as an obvious truth. This guy isn’t exploring reality; he’s just repeating dogma–and he would be doing it no matter what kind of mood he was in.
In the world of religion, everything about the human condition is used to redirect the attention to the images and dogmas of the belief system.
i dont see a man sitting in an empty box i see a man on a stool incredibly balanced on the edge of a solid 4 sided pyramid with its top chopped off, the painter is really saying we are very clever circus trick people.
i like the caption ‘rewards of the atheist’ so if that were the theistic version there would be (and here it depends if we are looking at a room or a truncated pyramid so either in or on)lots of wine, and jesus and virgins caressing his testes yes?? funny how theism is all about rewards, rather like being in nursery school with those little gold stars.
I’m not as insulted as an atheist as much as I am insulted as an artist. This work is tragically bad. It’s not even worth further commentary.
That’s not offensive; this is offensive:
http://furryjesus.ytmnd.com/
(Caution: contains audio and saturated FAIL; not safe for anyone with any self-respect.)
Of course atheists can believe in love. I have a whole screed on it on the chunk of my website devoted to atheism. Short form: Duh, atheists feel love too. Even if they didn’t, love can be seen by its effects on behavior. (How many songs are there about the difference between saying you love someone and actually acting like it?)
BTW, Che – I define love as “the condition where the happiness of another becomes important or essential to your own.” And yeah, that exists outside of cultural construction. Oy.
I looked at that and thought, “Yeah, okay, I can have a lot of fun sitting alone in a room.” I don’t actually consider that sort of thing to be a punishment; it gives me time to think. Then again, if one is a theist, time to think is its own punishment, more often than not.
My mother always said that left to their own devices, only stupid people get bored. Intelligent people can always find something to do. (Even if they’re stuck alone in a bare room by a teenage dumbshit.)
How dare he draw a cartoon depicting my beliefs in this way! Time to start burning people alive and bombing churches! Oh wait, sorry, I forgot… atheists have ethics based on community values. Let’s sit him down, buy him a pint and explain where he’s going wrong.
I loved the creed, PZ. Thanks for posting that.
Oh, and here’s Brunching Shuttlecocks’ most excellent “Geek Hierarchy” diagram for reference (although it doesn’t include ScienceBloggers for some reason):
http://www.brunching.com/images/geekchartbig.gif
I see a man exploring special relativity: sitting in a box that is accelerating smoothly through space at one G and achieving incredible speeds—and all the while feeling like he’s still sitting in a room on earth.
Exploring our amazing reality; the rewards of atheism.
Posit the Bible as true. What did people do before Jesus wandered along? They had kids, families, kept animals, partied, wept, lived and died. These things happened even to the other people who didn’t believe in God (they may or may not have believed in other ones). So if love wasn’t possible without God, then why were these people able to go on, to reproduce and and do all (well, most) of the things we do today? In addition, it seems like various groups claiming to believe in God came to opposite decisions on the morality of their actions, so their belief in God did not help them behave morally, because some of them did not. Again, how did societies manage to exist and not destroy themselves without a belief in God? History seems to indicate that people can live and live morally without the belief which the artist claims is necessary for such life – either history is wrong, or the artist is.
P.S., Artist: You know, if you want to deal with reality through art, then you need to be willing to deal with criticism of your art and defend it. If you haven’t the courage to deal with the issues your art raises, there’s no reason for anyone to spend their time pondering your art, because it isn’t likely to say anything deep enough about life or anything else to be worth the time. If you persist in your art you will have to confront a world unlikely to believe or perceive what you do, and if you cannot deal with that confrontation, then you should choose another method of self-fulfillment.
I admit to being a little sickened by the image, but that is mainly down to shoddy execution. There’s a twisted and ruined perspective on display here in more ways than one.
What kind of artist is so friggin’ incompetent they can neither render nor shade a simple cube? (Oh right, a deviantartist.)
Boy, that picture brings back memories.
Years ago I had a friend tell me that it was sad that I didn’t believe in god. “So empty and alone,” was how I think she put it.
My response? “I’m not in the box…I’m OUT OF IT!”
Or, to quote Austin Powers: “It’s freedom, baby, yeah!”
What did people do before Jesus wandered along?
I sometimes think that’s why hominid evolution is so hard to accept by theists (and some philosophers). It sure is hard to posit statements like “the purpose of life is to praise God”, or “the nature of man is…” when you’ve got all these pesky generations for whom such statements do not hold.
Attention to deviantart users is like crack to a junkie.
Case in point:
I just wanted to say that I think the atheist’s creed you wrote is quite beautiful.
For some reason, talk about the unavoidable “God-shaped hole” we have to fill with God always reminds me of those days when women were routinely informed that the entire point of their existence was marriage and motherhood. If you could not find a man, or have a child, your life could only be an empty wasteland, and existence was ashes. Everything else the world had to offer — all creativity, love, exploration, wisdom, beauty, achievement, and pleasure — was denied to the barren woman.
It’s not enough that marriage and children are one means of fulfillment, and not to everyone’s taste — no, they are the sine qua non of existence. It’s all — or it’s nothing. And if you don’t find belief in God to be the ONLY thing that makes life worthwhile, that speaks to the poverty of your viewpoint, instead of my own.
If you’re told something like that often enough, you tend to buy into it. Even if it makes no sense.
Instead of “Rewards of the Atheist” you could re-caption the picture as “The Rest of My Miserable Life If Bobby Doesn’t Ask Me to the Prom.”
As SteveM said, grow up.
So I was walking with my buddy Jesus one day, on the beach of all places, and I noticed that there were two sets of footprints behind us, one set belonging to me, the other to Jesus.
I spoke to Jesus, “Lord, I’m looking back over these footprints of my life. And I noticed something: sometimes there are only one set of footprints, and each time that occurs, it is always during the hardest times of my life. Why is that?”
He replied, “Kyle, my son… that’s when you were downtrodden and I had to get the fuck out of Dodge before you started bringing me down, too.” Then he stuck his sandal out and tripped me up — laughing heartily as I ate sand.
That Jesus, always cracking jokes.
You guys better not tell Jesus I told you that, or there will be footprints on my ass instead of in the sand. For serious.
If this picture offends you, remember that it is not directed at you. Even if you are an atheist.
If it claims to be about atheists, but isn’t directed at atheists, then who the hell is it directed at?
Oh, right, the religious people who want to feel superior to everyone else.
A more apt illustration would be the athiest on a stool on a tiny Little Prince-style planetessimal, with the vastness of the universe opening up around him/her on all sides.
This image would still scare the shit out of most theists, though, don’t you think?
If you just drew a piano in front of him, it wouldn’t be that far off.
heh
PZ-
Love your Atheists Creed! I couldn’t help but think of “Ulysses” by Alfred Lord Tennyson which concludes:
There lies the port; the vessel puffs her sail;
There gloom the dark, broad seas. My mariners,
Souls that have toil’d, and wrought, and thought with me,–
That ever with a frolic welcome took
The thunder and the sunshine, and opposed
Free hearts, free foreheads,– you and I are old;
Old age hath yet his honor and his toil.
Death closes all; but something ere the end,
Some work of noble note, may yet be done,
Not unbecoming men that strove with Gods.
The lights begin to twinkle from the rocks;
The long day wanes; the slow moon climbs; the deep
Moans round with many voices. Come, my friends.
‘Tis not too late to seek a newer world.
Push off, and sitting well in order smite
The sounding furrows; for my purpose holds
To sail beyond the sunset, and the baths
Of all the western stars, until I die.
It may be that the gulfs will wash us down;
It may be we shall touch the Happy Isles,
And see the great Achilles, whom we knew.
Tho’ much is taken, much abides; and tho’
We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are,–
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
We atheists need to live up to the last three lines…
BGC
PZ, I’m hearing of a hint of Ann Elk, from the classic Cleese Python sketch:
“Well, this is what it is – my theory that I have, that is to say, which is mine, is mine”
This guy can’t be more than 22 with that kind of sophomoric attitude. At least he got one thing right. It most definitely isn’t directed at atheists, its just preaching to the choir for other religious freaks. They enjoy spreading lies about other people amongst themselves.
Nice quotation pixelfish!
As for theists, too believe in an allmighty god is a definite product of fear. Fear of not being omnipotent, fear of not knowing all that is.
Where science tries to solve mysteries, religion rather cloaks them in an illusion involving an omnipotent projection of a man-like ruler or creator…
And still..
If god is everything.. This “universe” might have created perceptive organisms (organs better yet) to gaze upon itself.
And if so, god sure as goddamned hell wouldn’t want us to ignore the whole scenery.
Post scriptum: drawing sucks nuts
Dear ‘October Mermaid’
I’m a bit of a lonely atheist myself, just not the same resons.
When I am feeling a bit lost I go into nature, and I mean some lively nature, not a city park.
After observing and absorbing for a while I kind of get a recharge of sorts. An, OK I get it again thing.
You do have an afterlife. Just not a conscious one.
A drag for one’s ego but great for the universe.
Every on of your atoms will become part of an infinite number of other things an infinite number of times.
To me that beats heaven hands down
peter
** The “madman” is not emo. **
Nietzsche’s “madman” appears in section 125 of “Die Froeliche Wissenschaft” — Kaufmann translates as “The Gay Science.” [The primary meaning assigned to ‘gay’ between 1954 and today has altered considerably; it has to be mentioned.] Perhaps “The Exuberant Science” would work.
Of course the “madman” is not insane at all. He is looking for “God” with a capital G exactly the same way in which Diogenes the Cynic, lantern in hand, looked for the Platonic form of “Man.” The Platonic idea, Man, cannot be found because it does not exist. The “madman” knows that God is dead.
It is this knowledge, lacking in a xian-saturated culture, which he cannot convey to his listeners in the noisy marketplace of worthless ideas. Though the mob itself was the murderer of God. The deed and its consequences (war on an international scale, widespread social disorder) were light-years away. Sadly, World War I was only 26 years off when N became incurably insane in 1889.
Also, it’s important to read sections 108-127 inclusive in FW to understand just what N is doing in section 125.
After Buddha died his shadow was shown in a cave . . . .
bipolar2
You know how much a studio that size would cost in the East Village? And I get if for free being an atheist? Sign me up!
PZ, if you’ve got nothing better to do than find insignificant stuff like this and hammer a confused adolescent, the battle of ideas must be going a lot better than I thought.
BJN, lighten up. The kid in question needs a good intellectual bashing.
Dear ‘October Mermaid’
I’m a bit of a lonely atheist myself, just not for the same reasons.
When I am feeling a bit lost I go into nature, and I mean some lively nature, not a city park.
After observing and absorbing for a while I kind of get a recharge of sorts. An, OK I get it again thing.
You do have an afterlife. Just not a conscious one.
A drag for one’s ego but great for the universe.
Every one of your atoms will become part of an infinite number of other things an infinite number of times.
To me that beats heaven hands down
peter
“This atheist simply believes in all that is (which is quite a lot), and doesn’t believe in that which isn’t …”
But doesn’t KNOW what all is or isn’t, but never-the-less has great FAITH in what he BELIEVES is or isn’t, and will shout such from the roof-tops as do all the truly wise members of his species.
How but a theist in a room shackled to the cross. He has blinders on his eyes and the cube is completely dark. Above him a light shines from the ceiling. Unable to identify it’s source, the theist mistakenly identifies the light as god.
“Every one of your atoms will become part of an infinite number of other things an infinite number of times.”
No, eventually the universe will suffer heat-death and all your atoms will stay in what-ever state they are in forever. Permanent stagnation.
The artist’s intent with this picture actually does prove his point. Religion is more comforting than atheism. Ofcourse it is. If only it were so easy as choosing to believe. Right? Who would be an Atheist? But truth requires more than belief. This human need for comfort and purpose is clearly shown by this work. So when I saw this post I was reminded of the psychological role religions and gods play for us. Religion provides you with comfort, allows you to connect with something much larger than yourself, and gives your life meaning. This does NOT mean that it is true though. Scientific verification does that. It simply means we are biased to believe in religion because it does so much psychologically. So much that some even feel bad for atheists because they are missing out on all the love and wonder. I strongly disagree with this pity. On the contrary, I find the natural world incredibly amazing and inspiring as is. No god necessary…
Apparently, that little room has an endless loop of Queensryche’s “I Don’t Believe In Love” playing, ’cause, you know, since atheists don’t believe in love, it’s like our anthem and stuff.
But heck, Jedi don’t believe in love either, and I’d totally trade love for cool Force powers and a lightsaber. We atheists are totally getting ripped off! No love and no smacking people around with telekinesis either! Jeesh!
I see what the artist is trying to do here. He’s trying to clarify the difference between the holder of a view, and the view itself. He’s simply giving his nonsense idea of atheism, but doesn’t doesn’t wish for Jon Doe, who’s also an atheist, to think of this as a personal attack.
Now he fails in being upstanding and even handed in two places. One is that while realizing that this could irritate people, he has refused to have an open discourse about it. This not only cuts off any revision of his own thoughts, but it also cuts the rest of the world off from hearing his reasons. Basically, he’s acting like a chickenshit.
The other reason is that while we can criticize views without speaking of those who hold them, the knowledge that “I” am not being attacked personally doesn’t stop me from being irritated that “my” position has been attacked. Since, I’m the holder of it, “I” am indirectly being criticized. So it’s still going to cause a stir. He expects that by giving a disclaimer for one type of offense, he has diffused them all.
So fine, the kid doesn’t want any of us to think this is an attack on us as people. I’m fine with that. But he isn’t going to defend his nonsense, and doesn’t realize that it’s still going to irritate us as it is an attack upon our views, even if he isn’t attacking us as view holders.
So at the end of the day he remains ignorant, acts like a coward, and doesn’t even have the goodwill to try and save us nihilistic atheists from our delusions. Well done.
Man alive! All the disses to deviantART are crazy. It’s a great place to showcase work and get in touch with other artists.
I’ve got a gallery there, The Flying Trilobite Gallery
and PixelFish is no slouch either. Dismissing deviantART artists is much like dissing anyone using WordPress or Blogger.
That said, this work is pretty immature. It shows the same level of care and control and striving toward quality that his arguments do.
Now please, throw some pageviews toward PixelFish and myself. It’s for the good of atheist-artists everywhere. :-)
(PixelFish, you rock. I’m adding your gallery to my blogroll.)
I like and agree with your creed, PZ.
I don’t get this “believe in love nonsense.” People talk about believing in love or happiness but never about believing in pain or exasperation or itchiness. Presumably people usually mean they believe that love or happiness can be achieved or can endure. The claim that materialists can’t believe in love is something else though; I’m not sure how to make sense of it. I think it’s just a case of people conflating two different ways of using the word “believe.”
For more depth on this guy’s definition of love (archived on fstdt since he’s hiding the comment on his site):
http://www.fstdt.com/fundies/comments.aspx?q=35828
Summary: community charity work is the opposite of a loving act and a waste of time and we better stop it before its too late.
An atheist’s creed
I believe in time,
matter, and energy,
which make up the whole of the world.(Well, and “space” also … actually the 4 dimensional space-time that Einstein talked about … but, of course, there could be 11 or 13 dimensions of space as the string theorists say … but that’s just theory, and I don’t BELIEVE in theory, only FACTS, but then when it comes down to it everything is science is theory, and I know FOR SURE that I believe in science! And science says there is matter and energy, or rather maybe matter and energy are two aspects of the same thing, but that’s all in the realm theory not fact, which is what I believe in … now where was I? Ah yes, I believe in facts, facts provided by science. It is rather inconvenient that science only provides me with theories …
I think I’ll go eat lunch and write my creed some other time.
The following perfect quote comes to mind whenever I hear yet another religious person equate atheism or non-theism with nihilism, depression, anger, etc.
“We are all tolerant enough of those who do not agree with us, provided only they are sufficiently miserable.”
– David Grayson
That picture/concept is simply the only way some religious people have been able to resolve living among people who think differently. Their loss….
The claim that materialists can’t believe in love is something else though; I’m not sure how to make sense of it. I think it’s just a case of people conflating two different ways of using the word “believe.”
I don’t see the problem of using the word “believe”, either. I believe I exist. I could use a bunch of other words and phrases to get the idea across, but “believe” is what it boils down to. I believe I get hungry and cold and feel emotions. The point is: my beliefs are not set in stone. I don’t depend on them for psychological security. It may turn out that I am wrong, and that many of my beliefs are illusory. I’m okay with that. The truth is more important than my beliefs.
The word belief doesn’t always mean “ideology”.
I think this image is better suited.
http://img218.imageshack.us/img218/1566/rewardofthetheistpl4.jpg
The artist who drew the picture speaks volumes about a lot of theistic mentality.
All they care about are some petty rewards more than anything else.
They’re more concerned with getting doggie buscuits for having faith even though they could have a fat juicy steak for having reason.
@Flying Trilobite: I agree. Dev is a great place to show furries, fetishes and lame “omg i wanna draw japanese” kiddie art.
I can’t believe that this post (of all the wonderful things posted here) finally brings me out of lurkdom!
It’s true that DeviantArt contains a lot of silliness, but it also contains quite a bit of very nice art. Full disclosure: I have a small gallery there, myself.
There’s also a nice variety of cephalopod art. Here’s one of my favorites – absolutely adorable!
Don’t buy into their terminology. Accepting the world as it is does not resemble “belief” in unsubstantiated stories. Some atheists may well have beliefs, but atheism is not about beliefs. It’s about confident, provisional acceptance of interpretations of the world that are best supported by evidence.
Belief is too frivolous a word for something so simple. “Belief”, like “faith”, implies a confusion between “is” and “ought”, and suggests a lack of a filtering system to differentiate between true and false. The evidence-based “acceptance” that I describe above is not a similar means of constructing a worldview. Terminology should reflect this enormous difference in methodology.
What a FANNY!
LOL!! This JERKOFF will no doubt be eaten by wolves or be discovered roughly penetrating some poor child in the not-to-distant future. I would dearly love to ACTUALLY spit in his/her contorted face. Get FUCKED dickwad!!!
LOL!!!
It’s not that there isn’t any truth to the picture, or that it doesn’t pertain to atheists. It encapsulates what is a component of the human condition–not just the atheist condition. And that’s what is so irritating about it.
Everybody feels like this at times, but religion tells you to paint whimsical murals on the wall that show lions lying peacefully with sheep, and the sweet face of Jesus (so full of goodness, and understanding, and infinite compassion)–all in an effort to cover up the four walls and pretend that the lovely pictures are infinite, wide open spaces. The only problem is all the nose bleeds that result.
Atheists are more interested in examining the walls to see what they’re made of. And besides, all those fantasy pictures are annoying; they may be covering up a door!
I was googling to see if the Mahatma Ghandi quote at the end of the webpade linked was legitimate when i came across this website.
http://www.richardbewes.com/comments-6.html
HE WRITES:
SEVEN STEPS FOR ATHEISTS
By Richard Bewes
You’re hard at it, my friends – some of you; but you need a more vigorous recruiting method if you’re to have a hope of turning the world atheist. For all the efforts of a number of your champions, you’re falling behind on a number of fronts. Ought you not perhaps to disown some of your more prominent up-front spokespersons – who only seem to be turning out the well-worn slogans and boring cliches of many centuries? As an outsider to your cause, then, here are a few tips – nothing too heavy:
1. Up-grade your message
The BBC, here in the UK, does you a good turn from time to time, in sticking an atheist on its ‘religious’ morning programme Thought for the Day. As a Christian I’ve done a number of Thoughts myself for them.But why do your representatives come up with such daft and stale utterances as that given by your Richard Dawkins? – “Humanity can now leave the cry-baby stage and learn that it has finally come of age.” We’ve heard this sort of thing before. My goodness – we would like to see some substantial indication of the truth behind Dawkins’ statement. When was the turning point of our growing-up supposed to have taken place?
It was the celebrated Professor C.E.M. Joad who thought that the point was being reached quite early in the twentieth century; that our problems could be dealt with as circumstantial – relating to environment, lack of education and the ‘growing pains’ of the human race. But Joad completely back-tracked in 1952, after the experience of two world-wars. In his book Recovery of Belief, he admitted that such a theory “has been rendered utterly unplausible by the events of the last 40 years. To me, at any rate, the view of evil implied by Marxism, expressed by Shaw and maintained by modern psychotherapy, a view which regards evil as a by-product of circumstances, which circumstances can therefore alter and even eliminate, has come to seem intolerably shallow.”
So, in the face of today’s escalating wars, conflicts and atrocities on a bewildering variety of fronts, it’s a suggestion (only a suggestion) that you do what we Christians have done. Despite all the world problems that perplex us, we at least have worked out a framework of thinking that takes account of how evil entered our world, what God has done about it and how we may confront it. Suggestion: let the ‘growing-up’ argument be tactfully ditched, and some re-thinking be done. If not Dawkins, then someone else should try a little harder.
2. Be positive about your atheism
I once did a debate with a group of atheists and agnostics in Harold Wood, Essex, years ago; they were the Havering Humanists. I wasn’t too surprised when, some years later, they folded up – because in the debate I was aware, not of what they were for, but only of what they were against -and that was Christianity.
It doesn’t add much to the argument when one of your representatives, Philip Pulman, declares, “Without a doubt Christianity will cease to exist in a few years.” Does he not know that the Emperor Diocletian even had a medal struck at the turn of the third century AD, to celebrate the end of Christianity? In the end it was the Roman empire that bit the dust. Voltaire some two centuries ago prophesied that the Bible would soon be obsolete. He would have been surprised if he had known that his own Parisian residence would one day be turned into a Bible depot.
No, the historian T.R. Glover is nearer the mark in his words, “The final disappearance of Christianity has been prophesied so often as to be no longer interesting.” See to it, then; surely you atheists can improve on these clapped-out sentiments?
And it is absolutely no answer at all, when asked what your world-view is, to answer “I’m an atheist”; what we would want to know is not what you don’t believe, but what you do believe, about life and its meaning, on this world. How do you interpret your own existence? What is life for?
It was Mahatma Gandhi years ago who was once asked to organise and promote an atheistic cult. He replied, “It amazes me to find an intelligent person who fights against something in which he does not believe.” Exactly. Atheism is a denial – and if it simply stays as that, then its only reason for existing is parasitic. So my tip for the atheist is, See if you can develop a positive message which does not rely on an adversary to keep its momentum going! Otherwise, all you will do is to harden and strengthen the defences of your opponents. So what do you believe – positively?
3. Be creative about your atheism
Forget what you’re trying to attack; there’s no lasting future in that. Instead, start to express your atheism creatively; to address sonnets to it, to create sculptures – and dedicate concertos to it. I’m not sure you have done much in this field of sheer creativity yet; symphonies, paintings, statues, poetry? Most of the art galleries in Europe seem to be stuffed with the work of Christians. See if you can fill the beautiful museums of this world with vivid and attractive expressions of your belief-system. Anything else? –
4. Be populist in your appeal
Rallies, for example. Oh, you need to do more than book a London theatre for an esoteric debate with some religious cleric. That will only feed yourselves. No, think towards filling the biggest football stadiums you can – with people who are ready (and even longing?) for something better than what they are living for now. Like Billy Graham has done at Wembley Stadium. Why you might even emulate him as he did in Korea, and have a million in your audience at a disused airfield! He and Pope John Paul; they did tend to think big. Work a little harder.
Can you do the equivalent of BBC Television’s Songs of Praise? Let’s hear your atheistic music with its positive lyrics than can lift, inspire and give new hope to millions!
5. Show us your virtues
It would be a help if you can show us around atheistic youth clubs and camps and summer houseparties and any work you may be doing among orphans; let’s see your family and play groups, and community centres.
Could you take us on a tour of your work among the down-and-outs and the homeless, and your equivalent of the Salvation Army’s soup kitchens? And your centres for Aids sufferers? And the hospice movement – had you thought of getting any homes established, and staffing them yourselves?
And – if we can be really adventurous – take us abroad for a peep at your leprosariums? I remember meeting Dr. Dennis Burkitt (of the Burkitt Lymphoma fame) out in Tanzania. He told me that he had been all over the tropics. Every single one of the leprosy hospitals he had ever visited were begun and run by Christians. Surely there must be one, run by an atheist organisation?
You see, I’m not absolutely sure that we have seen all that you have done, or could do, for suffering humanity. It’s only my tip….
6. Can you develop a ritual?
Every movement of substance needs a form of celebration, if it is to appeal to great masses of people. I suppose that the only really big atheistic movements in recent times were Communism and Fascism. And indeed for a while they did pull young people into their ranks, with marches, flags, songs, parades, medals and orchestrated adulation of the leadership. Have you plans for a similar exercise? Always assuming, I hope, that you would avoid the persecution of non-adherents – the burning of books, the pulling down of buildings and destruction of family life that seemed to go hand in hand with these organised movements?
So, I’d be glad to see how you celebrate your atheism. Which leads me to my last and seventh tip:
7. Let’s see some joy in your lifestyle
Oh we Christians have sometimes been accused of being kill-joys! Perhaps that has occurred when our beliefs have become rigidly nominal and mechanical. But visit a community which bears a close and personal relationship with Jesus Christ, and I would then ask whether you too have an infectious enthusiasm and joy that overspill with songs, love and practical service into the surrounding society, as theirs do, in community after community, in country after country – even when the government and the media try to shut down their operation. We have millions of martyrs on our roll of honour. I have known some of them. They were honoured to die for Christ. How far would you be prepared to be killed for your beliefs?
Are your prophets and your champions happy people? Do they come across that way? For they – and you also – will certainly need to show some joy, if others are to be drawn like a magnet into the sheer satisfaction of an atheistic world-view that really holds together and makes sense of the universe!
So, try a little harder. Seven tips, my friends. I wonder if this helps.
Well, I think this picture is better:
http://img164.imageshack.us/img164/6379/motivator9788296lv6.jpg
Its highly unsettling to see that many relgious people who use the language of religiousity to describe their motivations behind generosity assume arrogantly that an atheist devoid of the religious context should not have any motivation to do good things.
Ode To Atheism
Sacred God of Evolution!
Once again we seek advice,
And to show our resolution
We present a sacrifice.
We have come to offer PZ
On the altar of the gore.
Take his blood and cut his heart out!
Split his body into four.
Never mind his screams and protests.
Never mind he runs away.
He’s the one who wrote the Credo.
He’s the one who has to pay.
No not us, we’re minor minions,
Lurkers, trolls, and not to blame.
We just comment with opinions.
He’s the one who has the fame.
The Flying Trilobite: Awwww…thanks for your kind words. Oh, and I saw your comment over there first, before seeing this one here.
*hi-fives all around for atheist artists*
Blue: I enjoyed yer Cephalopods in Love. The murky quality of the water and the little glowing animals are great. I like the greens and blues you used.
That quote is an even greater masterpiece of projection than the picture!
Here we have a person who derides atheists for being nihilists who don’t believe in love, without actually going to the trouble of meeting a single atheist to see if this characterization bears any resemblance to truth or not.
And what does this person reveal about himself by his comments (which he hides to avoid criticism)? He reveals that he is a nihilist who doesn’t believe in love!
PixelFish:
Glad you liked the picture, but it’s not one of mine! Although I wish I’d done it.
My gallery is here
This atheist has a MySpace page. If the “artist” wants to see love, I’d gladly give him the URL so that he can visit the page that has parents, children, grandchildren, family, friends and a message of love to her children on her blog.
Instead of viewing atheists as you are conditioned to view atheists, how about actually walking a mile in my atheist shoes and see if that doesn’t make you want to advance your art with more accuracy.
Blue: Ooooo…nice work too. I’m glad you came out of lurkitude.
Karey #142:
Wow, that’s some link. Assuming this is the artist, it certainly spells out his/her position on how we understand what it is to love:
Love is apparently only “real” if it is “rewarded” by lasting forever. If it disappears, it never existed in the first place.
I was raised without religion, and I never learned to think this way. I find this scorn for the “temporary” not just hard to understand, but as depressing and nihilistic as he credits atheism. In order to value God, the artist has managed to work up a hatred and contempt for all the love and beauty he or anyone else has ever experienced in this world. Very sad.
If love means nothing if it lasts for a moment, where does it get its value if it lasts forever? This is not deep and wise — it’s shallow and callous. And more than a little frightening when you think THIS attitude is supposed to be the only foundation for understanding what “real” love is, and this sort of reasoning is why atheists always end up at the bottom of every poll on acceptance and tolerance taken. We “have no reason” to care about anything, and we don’t “get” where meaning comes from.
Can you say ‘projection?’
I copied this from a Christian site once because I thought it was funny:
“I think we Christians should look at this world as being a filthy restroom at a roadside gas station. Fate has brought us here, we try to touch as little of it as possible while doing our business, we hope to leave quickly, and we don’t ever plan on coming here again until it’s under better management.”
Yeah — and that’s how we learn values and avoid nihilism. Draw that.
From the FStDT comment @#142, a real masterpiece of phrasing:
“I would trade your life for the one I live any day.”
I bet you would.
And you’ll know they are Christians by their love.
“the Reward of the Atheist”.
The greed aspect of religion is something I’m very familiar with. I grew up surrounded by people who spent their lives trying to have the “faith of a grain of mustard seed” so they could get whatever they ask for. In church, many of them would utter the usual Christian catchphrases like “God is truth” or “the truth will set you free”, but the gleam in their eyes was about getting rewarded for being obedient.
They cultivate sadness and pity for atheists, and remind themselves often that heathens and unbelievers won’t be rewarded in the after life. We stubborn deniers of “The Truth” will never know the joy of Jesus stroking our heads and saying, “Well done thou good and faithful servant.”
Religion quite often epitomizes the merchant mentality, but greed for heavenly rewards is not spiritual, and it’s certainly not beautiful–it’s just greed.
“In order to value God, the artist has managed to work up a hatred and contempt for all the love and beauty he or anyone else has ever experienced in this world. Very sad.”
And yet this person is not living an ascetic life of religious study in a monastery somewhere. He/she’s in some comfortable house or apartment somewhere on the internet, and probably has a bunch of friends from church that he/she loves and possibly even a boyfriend/girlfriend. Drinking deeply of the cup of the same earthly pleasures that he/she scorns for their impermanency.
I say, put up or shut up, dirt people.
Glen Davidson is going to make me have to love someone if he keeps quoting my man Jim. :)
Here’s my take at a fix, if no one else has beat me to this version (sorry if you have!)
It’s painfully ironic that this was one of the main reasons why Jesus Christ threw that temper tantrum in the Temple in the first place.
Sastra’s comments made me think a little more about what our wee theist is trying to say. (And makes some good points about valuing love.)
Theist sez: “But it’s not the love I know. a love that is immortal and will transcend this short life. thats the love I believe in.”
I know logic isn’t his strong point, but if you believe that A) God exists and B) God’s love is eternal, then why does the atheist get excluded from that? If something is eternal, why would it stop existing for the atheist just because the atheist doesn’t believe in it. That would make the atheist more powerful than God’s love, and I’m pretty certain that’s not possible in the theist world-view.
Dude! Comment #152 really says it for me. Well done.
Just because the kid is delusional and ignorant and spouts a load of crap, there’s no need to insult 1. furry artists, 2. anime artists, 3. DeviantArt, or 4. his art specifically. It’s always an easy, cheap shot to throw in “And you can’t draw, either!” to something like this, but it is inappropriate and has nothing to do with the issue; it’s only intended to hurt the guy who offended you, which will make him slightly less amenable to reason.
In any case, I actually reported him to DeviantArt and asked if this constitutes hate speech/offensive content under their Terms of Service I pointed out if it were titled “Reward of the Jew” and talked about how sad he felt for Jews because they locked themselves away from Jesus, it would be prima facie offensive and in violation. I asked for some follow-up to see how they feel about pieces attacking atheists. We’ll see how it goes…
What more could an atheist want than a stool to sit and think? All else is excessive. That is a picture of Sam Harris meditating…
Kyle W. said:
That’s more like it!
Dark@168: Funny you should mention the DeviantArt TOS, because the bit you quoted on your website includes this:
b. to upload, post, or otherwise transmit any material that is obscene, offensive, blasphemous, pornographic, unlawful, threatening, menacing, abusive, harmful, an invasion of privacy or publicity rights, defamatory, libelous, vulgar, illegal or otherwise objectionable;
(I say funny, but maybe the blasphemy part is something we should consider getting DevArt to excise from their TOS. Hey, if Britain kicked their blasphemy laws today–as reported elsewhere on Pharyngula–DevArt might consider it too.)
Sastra:
Yes! It’s all part of the same thing. I genuinely worry about people who claim there’s not love, no compassion, no altruism, no meaning, no morality without a god. Is their “faith”, regardless of how flimsy or robust, the only thing standing between them and hatred, discompassion, avarice, nihilism and amorality? It’s frightening and sad.
I know a few Christians who believe that life on Earth doesn’t particularly matter, because it’s just a way station en route to the eternal. If that’s not a kind of nihilism, I don’t know what is. How can they claim to be “pro-life” when life means so little to them in the first place? They’re just killing time ’til time returns the favor.
Heh.. PixelFish, Dark, and others who’ve brought up the TOS:
I gotta say, that TOS doesn’t strike me as very “Deviant”. LOL
(With that said, I defend DevArt for being a fun and useful site for reasons already stated by others, above. The innertoobz are a better place with DevArt than without it. IMOSHO.)
As Krensada often identifies himself as “me” on his profiles like: http://krensada.sheezyart.com/ for example. I’d say he might be lurking at #134
I just posted some of the lyrics to Imagine there.. And then I got carried away with other stuff and posted your adorable cephalopod.
It looks like the comments are arranged differently when you log in, as opposed to browsing as a guest. In the latter case, you have to clock through 29 pages of hidden comments until getting to the recent, un-hidden ones. When logged in, the most recent comments are listed first.
The only thing I can’t tell is, whether this is supposed to say that the picture is satire, or a reference to Sartre. Which wouldn’t make much sense, but would be quite amusing to me.
I tend to see Deviant Art the way I see Blogger. 90%+ of just about everything is crap. Sift out the bits you like.
That said, rant of mine.
YGUTMA: You guys use too many acronyms.
O ME! O life! of the questions of these recurring,
Of the endless trains of the faithless, of cities fill’d with the
foolish,
Of myself forever reproaching myself, (for who more foolish than I,
and who more faithless?)
Of eyes that vainly crave the light, of the objects mean, of the
struggle ever renew’d,
Of the poor results of all, of the plodding and sordid crowds I see
around me,
Of the empty and useless years of the rest, with the rest me
intertwined,
The question, O me! so sad, recurring-What good amid these, O me,
O life?
Answer.
That you are here-that life exists and identity,
That the powerful play goes on, and you may contribute a verse.
~Walt Whitman
I prefer this one, it is similiar to PZs, but much better written :)
#164, nice correction.
I diagnose that the artist has a Tooth-Fairy-shaped hole in his heart.
Pixelfish@#171: Yeah, “blasphemy” sort of jumps out atcha and makes you go “What’s THAT doing there?!” I considered making a separate issue out of that, but hey, one thing at a time. ;) I’m waiting to see if DeviantArt notes me back to see where they stand on the whole issue. Though I’m not going to be remotely surprised if it’s something along the lines of “We defend against religious hate speech, and atheism isn’t a religion, lol sorry. You godless heathens are on your own. :D”
Kseniya@#173: DeviantArt is the least deviant art site you could possibly find. You want deviant art, you google y!gallery.. I guarantee you’ll find something to blind you within the first five minutes. (Disclaimer: Not because of the gay. Gay is great. I love the gay. But Dragonball Z BDSM porn, I could live happily without ever even contemplating the existence of. ..Although, hilariously enough, even y!gallery bans the furries.)
Oh no!!
“[Comments have been Permanently disabled for the reason of my message inbox being flooded…and I just don’t care to hear your opinions anymore…I’m quite tired of hearing the same thing over and over.]”
Sadness. :(
Just in case anyone cares he’s given up and turned off the comments.
Aren’t we all.
This is what I get for turning into a falcon: slow typing.
What say we dig out his e-mail and start sending objections to that?
Well, thank you for posting it. The indent before the creed made me think it was a quote of someone else’s work.
And here it is on the front page: Krensada@gmail.com
Might be childish to fill his inbox but it would also be funny.
I’m rather fond of Madalyn Murray O’Hair’s statement at the top of the legal complaint which initiated Murray v. Curlett. Most of you are probably familiar with this, but for those who aren’t, check it out. It’s not only good, it’s historic:
The job is here, and the time is now.
That kinda says it all, for me. Those are words to live by whether one believes in a god or not.
People like our little artist buddy who think life is dirt obviously don’t get this.
I can’t believe that we shouldn’t spam his Gmail. However, I’ll fake belief this time and say that it shouldn’t be done.
Okay, maybe just one little email each to remind him that our outrage ‘is not directed at’ him.
Last I checked, which was 15 seconds ago, the artist has already deleted it.
Henceforth he shall be referred to only as “The Artist Formerly Known As ‘Dirt'”.
LOL, he pulled it down because he claims it violated the Deviantart TOS
http://krensada.deviantart.com/journal/
A poor artist who doesn’t know perspective and a coward. What a loser.
So not only is he an idiot and a goit he’s a coward?
Spam him.
Excellent… I’ll save this and show it to my future grandchildren someday. Thank you
Wonderful creed.
Also, we could be cunning and have all the e-mails be thanking him for taking down the offensive art and then a second set explaining atheism so he’ll know not to be offensive next time. You know, spam disguised as an attempt to help and make peace.
“l’enfer, c’est les autres”)
Great idea, Loki! Good thing this is a private blog, so nobody will know what we’re up to.
*whistles tunelessly*
Aw, it took a little too long, and now he’s gone and deleted the piece, but I drew him some fanart.
http://kaiwolf.deviantart.com/art/Rewards-of-Krensada-79375927
Like missionary work? Cool. You get to work pilfering their gold and silver to line our cathedrals, I’ll start destroying their heathen artwork. Anybody want to take on the job of handing out smallpox infected blankets or splitting up families by kidnapping children and incarcerating them in residential schools?
Although the piling-on is starting to get a bit much (I mean, at least the guy is being a twit on his own turf), I finally clicked on his main DA page from home and got a load of the stamps thereon (anyone with that many really needs to go outside), and one of them says “I’m a Christian and proud of it.” Funny, I seem to remember that being one of their deadly sins. *facepalm*
That’s the first time anyone has ever told me to pilfer anything since that last time-
You don’t need to know about that.
Let me get my pirate hat and I’ll be on my way!
What a bunch of bullies and adolescents we have here. PZ, do you really support the abusive tactics that crashed down on this unwitting target? What a proud moment for Pharyngula.
re: ME #136
I was offering some comfort, not exact science.
Geeez.
Effing twit.
“A recent study by the Barna Research Group throws extreme doubt on these estimates. Barna released the results of their poll about divorce on 1999-DEC-21…Divorce rates among conservative Christians were significantly higher than for other faith groups, and much higher than Atheists and Agnostics experience” (http://www.religioustolerance.org/chr_dira.htm).
Dark (#168), I think that the artist’s drawing and writing is imperceptive and silly, and that this reflects a narrow experience.
But there’s certainly no reason to appeal to third party censorship as a solution. Just look at the art as an opportunity to discuss and educate.
Also, your analogy which substitutes “Jews” for “atheists” is a bit of a cheap shot, since Jews are an ethnic group who have faced persecution not just for their religious ideas, but for their ethnicity. Criticizing an idea, whether religious or secular, ought to be fair game. Criticizing an ethnicity is not a comparable thing.
So let the misguided kid criticise the idea of atheism. Hopefully, exposure to actual atheists and their ideas will help him to see beyond his caricatures.
Alright, so. I sent him the e-mail you see under this line (as I can’t do html).
=-=-=-=-=-
I got sent a link to one of your pictures (http://img341.imageshack.us/img341/4581/rewardoftheatheistxo8.jpg) and tbh it annoyed me a bit.
I mean, the description on your site is all about how you think Atheism is depressing and you’re welcome to that, but then you said that Atheists can’t love and also that they’re alone and neglected and all that.
Seems a bit mean really. I mean, I could say “religious people can’t love and are silly sods” and it’d be the same kind of thing: a blanket statement that people would find offensive.
I would say I’m glad you took it down when you realised how offensive it was, but did you really have to draw it in the first place?
Oh yeah, before I forget, maybe you should research the differences between Atheism and Nihilism, ’cause your picture might be better received if it was titled “The Rewards of Nihilism”.
Loki
PS: Love doesn’t have to be believed in as it can be proven to exist.
PPS: Also, Atheists just don’t believe in God: everything else is fine.
=-=-=-=-=-
I thought my e-mail was quite kind. This is his response:
=-=-=-=-=-
From: Travis Brown (krensada@gmail.com)
yes…cause it proved i was right about you all. Truth hurts.
http://www.farmillia.com/
=-=-=-=-=-
I say we try and get his site taken off the web. Also, I’ve sent him the “Rewards of Krensada” image Dark made.
@ BJN: There’s one adolescent bully (true fact: I’m 18) and bully is stretching it a bit. ‘Sides, I don’t remember PZ telling anyone to do anything. I just think this guy deserves a bit of a rattle for being a fool and/or a goit.
Spaulding@#206: I dislike censorship intensely generally, however: 1, I am desperately curious about how DA would react to this, that is, whether they would treat it the same way they would offense against another group, and 2, this guy is censoring all the comments to the picture, anyway. I hate censorship, but I think I hate even more when someone spouts utter nonsense in a public forum and then denies anyone else the opportunity to contradict him.
You could substitute another religion if the Jew analogy is uncomfortable (though I think it stands, purely on the basis of the Christian belief that not believing in Jesus = hell). It was the first religion to come to mind since I’m not exactly sure how Christians view Islam in those terms (since they believe in Jesus, but not as the messiah). But the effect would be the same if you picked on Hindus or Buddhists, though Christians often seem much less likely to attack them then atheists (or muslims).
BJN@#203: I don’t condone bullying. However, if you say something which is wrong and insulting, I don’t have much sympathy for you when the group you’re targeting tries to defend themselves. It’s not our fault he didn’t realise the number of people he was targeting with those remarks. I’ve already said nasty comments about his art (or choice of art subjects) were over the line. And in my own defense, he thought my fanart was funny. :) He mostly just seems, to me, frustrated that he was overwhelmingly shot down instead of praised; I don’t think many people were engaging in bullying (though some were insulting, which was inappropriate and juvenile, I agree).
I’ve always thought the cool part about The Madman is that he’s actually talking to atheists in GS, #125 — and after his “rant,” they all look at him in astonishment.
That part always cracks me up.
For some reason I have Robin Williams’ “You’re just a kid” monologue from Good Will Hunting going through my head after all this. His profile lists his age as “over 21,” but I’ll bet it’s by weeks or months, not years.
No one has said anything bullying here. Arrogant little shits need to be taken down a peg or two sometimes, and if you don’t agree, it’s because it never happened to you. With any luck, he’ll think, and study, before shooting his mouth off next time. If so, that’s a battle won.
Stupid, silly, shallow little boy! He missed the point about as completely as a point can possibly be missed!
I dunno, Spaulding. I’m sympathetic to your point of view and to and the sensitive nature of casting Jews in the role of the damned in the context of an overtly Christian outlook, but am not convinced you are correct in this case. I think the “shot” may be valid. The topic is religious belief, not ethnicity. The artist is a Christian, and outspokenly proud of being one. What defines a Christian? Is it not central to Christian doctrine that only in accepting Jesus as ones personal savior can one find salvation? Doesn’t that condemn all adherents of Judaism to The Fiery Lake?
What if we instead of “Jew” we replace “Atheist” with “Muslim”, “Hindi”, or “Buddist”? Aren’t the all the same with regard to their view of the divinity of Jesus? Why do we exempt Judaism – a creed, not an ethnicity – from eligibility for use in these counter-examples?
I suppose one could argue that the topic is atheism vs. theism, and therefore substituting anything – even “agnostic” – for “atheist” would be invalid, if we presume the artist is addressing lack of belief in a deity, not lack of belief in his own particular flavor of religion.
I also suppose that you might be right, and that I might be wrong. But there’s my current POV, anyways. :-)
Whoa. I’m waaaay behind Dark on this point. Never mind!
I don’t know why he would think his picture would represent anything bad for an atheist. I mean, if we can’t believe in love, we can’t believe in loneliness or ennui, either, so some quiet time to think wouldn’t be much of a punishment.
PEOPLE:
NO SPAMMING THIS PERSON.
I can’t believe you’re advocating that kind of obnoxious attack.
Yep. Pretty unclear on the whole “pride” thing. Not worth wasting any more time on.
Just one small thing…the person who drew this picture is young, immature, and has a wrong conception of atheists. Fine.
But please don’t write him off as “what do you expect from a furry?” That’s just as off-handedly dismissing him the way her off-handedly dismissed us.
thank you, I shall return to lurking now.
*delurks to correct her grammar*
…dismissing him the way he dismissed us.
*scampers back into lurking*
“Last I checked, which was 15 seconds ago, the artist has already deleted it.”
If mistake no. 1 was creating it, mistake no. 2 was taking it down.
I hope he puts it back. It was doing what art should do: provoking discussion!
I wouldn’t complain to DA about a violation of any “hate speech” criteria because I don’t believe in restricting criticism. I hate hate speech rules. The artist’s attack on atheists was an attack of ideas, not a violent physical attack. Why do what we scorn when they do it?
As for whether he or she deserves to be “taken down a peg or two” — certainly. With skill. And that means intelligently, courteously, and thoughtfully. No spam attacks. Or dirty tricks. We don’t need those; they’re signs of a weak position.
It is never a mistake to be nicer and kinder than you need to be. If you gain no credit from your opponent, you gain credit from observers. If you gain no credit from observers, you gain credit in your own eyes. You won that one. And, at some level, they know it.
Drives them nuts.
PZ, I’m reminded of this.
..I don’t understand why everyone’s getting so upset over something on DeviantArt.
As we’ve seen, this furry-drawing twat’s traffic has spiked, and he’s taken down his tepid, harmless drawing to placate the thousands of atheists who saw it and actually decided to sit down at a keyboard and complain to him about it. So now he thinks his ‘work’ struck a nerve (and it would seem like that’s true for some commenters here), and he’s gotten his first taste of ‘reckless iconoclasm = traffic’. Two bad lessons for the price of one!
Pharyngula (and RD.net) have readerships large enough to consider throwing around their ideological weight to influence things, sort of like an atheist lobby. But I don’t think it’s necessarily a good idea to hate-bomb specific examples of the stupid shit that can be found anywhere on the internet. When this kind of power is used to affect constructive changes in the public eye – in the town square of discourse, as it were – this is a good thing. It’s also a good thing when it can be used to rally around a cause, like someone who’d really benefit from a heap of drop-in-a-bucket style donations. Pharyngula has been used to promote causes of both of these kinds.
When it’s used to abuse a member of deviantART, who is literally a model of irrelevance and harmlessness, it’s bad. You’re not inspiring anyone, you’re not changing anyones mind, you’re not engaging in any kind of battle of ideas. You’re just bashing someone in an alley. Unfortunately it seems as though some of you find that rewarding.
In #132, Sarah insists that people who think tormenting this kid is a waste of time should ‘lighten up’ and join in the ‘intellectual bashing’. The key difference is that it’s okay to inflict suffering as long as it’s ‘intellectual’, and sometimes, y’know, people need that. Why focus on larger issues we can independently advocate, when we could be gang-bashing a single individual because of his ideas?
The tragic thing is that all it would probably take to change this guys mind, and explain the problem with his analogy, is a conversation, one on one. Probably any of us could do it with some civility.
Unfortunately, because it was highlighted here, hundreds of us initiated what was (to us) a one on one conversation with him, but what he received was a 100 on 1 shout-down, which he could not possibly hope to engage in, leaving him feeling battered, overwhelmed, and threatened. As Loki will inform us later, declining to even try and interact meaningfully with hundreds of people speaking at you one after the other makes you a coward.
By #151, we hit the first strikingly earnest attempt at dehumanising the individual, or at least relishing in the thought of his suffering – drawing comedy out of a future (brutally violent, as usual) demise, and fantasising about him being exposed as a pervert.
In #168, the irony of asking whether a piece specifically expressing pity is ‘hate speech’ is missed. This comes after secularists proudly (and rightly) defended the free speech of Danish cartoonists, whose caricatures of Mohammmed were clearly interpreted as hate speech by Muslims. This comes after (rightly) defending the right to deface a book like the Koran by throwing it in a toilet (so long as it’s private property). It’s not hate speech. Wipe your eyes.
From #185 we get people suggesting that unsolicited e-mails (spam) would be a great way of getting our message across. My giant, permanently erect penis agrees. Maybe if we send him enough e-mails, he’ll see that he was wrong to ignore and delete the previous ones! You guys are an inspiration. We’re going to change the world – one DDoS style attack at a time!
#193 informs us that filtering comments from unwelcome strangers makes you a coward. Note that this is said on Pharyngula without any irony. I guess I’ll see you at Loki’s house party.
Finally, it took only 207 comments before we hear the first call to censor free expression, by lobbying to get people we disagree with removed from the internet. We made it folks! Jeez, hold on.. I’m tearing up. This calls for a slow clap.
What I’m basically suggesting is that you’ve acted like a mob of browbeating thugs (again), aaand I find it disgusting. It’s a striking contrast with the lovely little creed PZ wrote.
I dunno, it looked to me like a young man, a teen probably, exploring art and his belief system. I don’t agree with what he said, but we probably don’t need to turn the full force of our ‘greater wisdom’ on him…
but we probably don’t need to turn the full force of our ‘greater wisdom’ on him…
bah.
heat, kitchen, etc.
Regarding #11 and others – “projection illustrated” was exactly what came to mind when I looked at the picture. If you took away believers’ god you’d be taking away not just a belief but a chunk of their identity; it would be safer and less messy to tear a turtle from its shell.
Not only that, I’ve never met a theist who can truly conceive of what it’s like to not believe. (Those who do generally give up theism eventually, as long as they’re in the right sort of environment.) So it’s not surprising that they go their whole lives convinced that atheists carry bleak and hopeless outlooks. An important corollary is that theists, despite how they appear to people like me who could never believe in gods even if offered a million dollars, are not trying to say incredibly stupid and inconsistent things; it’s either this or be threatened with a terrifying loss, so shutting down cognition is a no-brainer.
Comstock (56): I’m not so sure I believe in time. What the hell is it?
Don’t worry, unlike some anthropomorphisms I could mention, Time doesn’t need you to believe in it ;)
He lists his birth year as 1982 in another site…just so you guys don’t feel guilty tomorrow about harrassing a child.
I have a deviantart account. I am a member of more than one online art community. Hey, we all have our various interests.
http://coyotlprole.deviantart.com/art/Alternative-Garnishes-63508109
The atheist cartoon is gone now. I guess he removed it. Still, I can’t advocate censorship. The guy has as much right to create whatever art he wants as I do. I have an image in my gallery that utilyzes what looks like a swastika (schwarze sonne). And I didn’t receive any hate comments. What I found interesting–and encouraging–in this case, was the volume of atheist advocates that posted comments. Maybe this kid will actually talk to some atheists and get an accurate perspective on it now. Maybe this is an opportunity for some education. I see this as a potential positive.
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Gawd! Then he’s two years older than I am. Feh.
Spamming him is still a bad idea. (For the record, I hope it’s clear that when I said “Great idea!” above, I was being sarcastic.) While we’re on the subject, let’s not be too hard on Loki, who at 18 is likely the youngest person posting on this thread by at least a couple of years.
MAJeff:
Heh.
You realize of course, that “I’ll take beer” was supposed to be inside the first blockquote, but for some reason MT didn’t want to do it. I tried. Honestly, I tried.
I wonder what hole this guy’s been hiding in. I mean, when popular rock bands mention atheism and love in the same song:
I don’t have faith in faith
I don’t believe in belief
You can call me faithless
But I still cling to hope
And I believe in love
And that’s faith enough for me…
Yeah… Some deep, dark, and very well soundproofed hole it must be.
Lets rather believe the Lord, then to our own understanding and own ways….lets look up to the Lord….Jesus a Saviour….and praise Jehovah the God Almighty….Jesus is the way the truth and the light….no one goes to the father except through him Jesus Christ……
I pray for all those people who are lost with no God….believing in nothing….don’t push God away for material things… lets rather lift our heads high ….. and open our hearts to the Lord….
@more or less everyone: Yeah, I know, spamming is wrong and I shouldn’t do it and I won’t.
Also, while I’m sure that I guess I’ll see you at Loki’s house party. was sarcastic, you’re all welcome to come. Just bring your own booze. And don’t wreck too much stuff.
Also, I’m feeling like a git now. Stupid conscience, ruining my fun.
I refuse to be riled by this person, as his intent was never to do so, no matter how insipid his art and philosophy is, and naive he was about any stir it may cause. No simple attack on my thoughts will be met with anything other than the like: thoughts. Frankly, my mind is perfectly capable of defending itself when all it is up against is another mind(s). Anything more like bullying is simply out of the question ethically. Nor is it befitting anyone who would wish to count themselves among intellectuals, freethinkers, rationalists and the like.
We use our minds.
Holy Shit. Are #235 and #236 serious?
You guys are just screwing with us right? Otherwise, you happen to be some of the funniest satire artists I’ve seen in a few hours.
Find. New. Shtick.
I can think of one thing more depressing than being an atheist. Living in a world that is full of senseless dying, killing, cancer, horrible diseases, starvation, natural disasters, etc. and believing that there is an omnipotent, omniscient guy in the sky who has made all this stuff part of the plan. I don’t know, if you ask me that god doesn’t seem worthy of worship.
PZ, your creed made my day. I hope you don’t mind but I couldn’t help but share it immediately. (I gave you credit of course, and linked this blog post.)
Thank you, PZ for that wonderful creed. I too have shared it with the smugly ignorant people who seem to think that I have no joy or poetry in my life.
In the end, it is the smug ignorance of these willfully uneducated boobs that is the most frustrating. But then again, if they were not willfully uneducated, they wouldn’t be believers…
The blurry lil’ fella in the box doesn’t look upset, he looks content, albeit sleepy, on his stool. He’s not being harassed by a Jehovah Witness. He’s not being picked on by a bully. He isn’t answering a slew of annoying questions that have no purpose. He’s not eating a bad meal. He’s not watching bad TV. He’s not reading a shitty blog. He’s not cleaning up a mess.
Actually, what you can’t see is that he’s sitting in front of a two way glass, watching (insert name of any high brow Christ monger) orally dispose of his sermon. He’s counting how many people are paying attention vs the ones who aren’t. He’s surprised by the numbers. He’s confused about the message being delivered as it doesn’t make much logical sense. Prosperity preaching? So if I give Mr. Pastorman a check for such and such, I’ll receive it back seven fold? Now, he doesn’t have a calculator in that room but he’s doing his math. He’s now able to discern who’s ‘really’ a believer and who isn’t based on price of their shoes.
Then, after a while, the blurry fella begins to feel alone and sad. He’s not really sure why, it sort of hit him at once. He finds himself longing to be part of the crowd, to belong, to leave his box and venture into the sanctuary and be part of the commonality. He feels a little sick by it. He realizes this isn’t the first time he’s felt this way, feeling crappy is just part of the human experience… normally brought on by other humans.
His cell phone rings, it’s a text message from his wife telling him to stop watching the freak show and go pick up the kids from karate class.
The end.
“Rewards of the Atheist”? What, space to think? I realise that thinking is scary for some people, but for me, sitting quietly and pondering aspects of our fascinating Universe is something I find immensely pleasurable.
I imagine that the theistic version of that picture would involve the believer being tied to the chair, his/her eyes held open à la Clockwork Orange, and the Bible/Koran/Tanakh/Dianetics etc being unceasingly projected onto the wall in front of him/her, until the words get burnt into the very core of their mind.
I think I’ll stick with atheism.
I run a non profit that helps poor people get houses and I often get letters congratulating the idea/work and immediately crediting what I do to some god or another. I clear it up right away with a response that I’m an atheist. That always creates a funny response. I always get a response to that with sayings like, god is working through me, that I have to be christian to do what I do, I’m a christian I just don’t know it yet, there is a special place in heaven for me. It use to bother me, now it doesn’t. Like heaven, god the bible and all those churches out there I simply have no more use or thought for them.
Sastra @162, I once wrote something very similar to your quote from the Christian – but, not surprisingly, with a different punch line: http://sanguineinseattle.blogspot.com/2007/04/thus-spake-grady-mcmurtry.html
Um, but wouldn’t feeling that this life is the ONLY life (as opposed to an after-life) give this life FAR MORE VALUE? Wouldn’t you treat it as sacred and special and not just a rest-area on the way to the final Heavenland vacation? If it were me, and someone told me that the rest-area was all I got and that I would never leave it and go someplace more magical, I might paint the walls, put up some curtains, make a few knick-knacks and have some people over for beer and popcorn. I wouldn’t just take a dump, kick the vending machine and throw trash on the floor on my way out.
Greetings Atheists and Agnostics:
From my reading of this blog, there seems to be as much confusion on your side of the fence as mine. I would appreciate it if some of you could answer some questions for me: 1) were you born atheist or agnostic? 2)If you adopted your beliefs, at what age and under what circumstances (discipleship, life problems, parents, friends)? 3) Were you ever a Christian from age 12 up? 4) Have you ever read the bible? 5) Have you ever owned and studied a bible dictionary or bible commentary? 6) Are whatever beliefs you have based on personal study, analysis, obervation and application? 7) With whom do you communicate your deepest thoughts and questions?
I think that will be enough to help me understand. If I can do the same for you, please ask. By the way, if you have the capacity to love, you have God, whether you want Him or not. Feel free to thank Him every now and them.
An American atheist’s creed
I believe in time,
(So I waste it away in front of my TV)
matter, and energy,
(Which I do little-to-nothing with)
which make up the whole of the world.
(Or as much of the world as my TV shows me)
I believe in reason, evidence and the human mind,
(As proven by the Discovery Channel)
the only tools we have;
(We don’t use, atleast not for good cause, our handle lie idle, our mouths froth at junk, and our eyes we choose to no longer see with, the brain that once was)
they are the product of natural forces
(And we will use those forces for nothing)
in a majestic but impersonal universe,
(that I refuse to care about because my credit cards need paid)
grander and richer than we can imagine,
(but my greed will always chase my imagination)
a source of endless opportunities for discovery.
(But I’m too busy trying to get paid to seek out those opportunities and discover anything)
I believe in the power of doubt;
(and I doubt that my life will ever get better, it seems like I have less money every day)
I do not seek out reassurances,
(except from the bank)
but embrace the question,
(Can I purchase more Baubles?)
and strive to challenge my own beliefs.
(Money is my god)
I accept human mortality.
(So I must work to buy more, before I die)
We have but one life,
(How Will I ever buy everything I want for?)
brief and full of struggle,
(To buy things my TV tells me to buy)
leavened with love and community,
(of which we lie, because we know nothing about, but it’s a fantastic idea)
learning and exploration,
(and we’ve been dumbed down by our masters the ruling elite)
beauty and the creation of
(BMW has a new model out in 09)
new life, new art, and new ideas.
(more things to buy)
I rejoice in this life that I have,
(Because I have a nice car and five credit cards, and my car is nicer than his)
and in the grandeur of a world that preceded me,
(they worked hard for my freedom, so I dont have to)
and an earth that will abide without me.
(So I will sit back and do nothing, but important things… like pay my bills, and buy new things, and protest, and question nothing, Except everyones beliefs and religion.)
“If I can do the same for you, please ask. By the way, if you have the capacity to love, you have God, whether you want Him or not.”
There is no god listening to you no matter how much you pray.
Wow, making unfounded assertions is fun.
Maybe there is something to the whole god thing.
I love the fact how there’s always the “Have you read the Bible?” nonsense. I’ve read it several times. That you can get “God is love” from the genocidal bastard in that book is amazing.
God is love–so he destroyed the planet with a flood.
God is love–so he wiped out and required the destruction of several different peoples
God is love–so he condones the ownership and murder of other humans
God is love–so he required the murder of “his own son”
God is love–so he’ll force you to burn for eternity if you don’t accept that you’re so broken you have to “accept” the murder of his son.
What a vile monster.
What have you done that’s so evil another human has to be killed for it? And how are you so deluded that requiring that murder equates love? It’s all in your own book.
It’s getting kind of late in the thread to get off on whole new tangents, I think, but very nicely asked, so ok:
lightbulb #247:
1) were you born atheist or agnostic?
My parents were freethinkers when I was born, and I was raised with no particular religion, but exposed to different ones.
2)If you adopted your beliefs, at what age and under what circumstances (discipleship, life problems, parents, friends)?
I held various views at different times, including agnostic, atheist, liberal Christian, New Age, Jehovah’s Witness, Quaker, “spiritual but not religious,” Transcendentalist, and, eventually, secular humanist by age 25 or so. It was a gradual process, motivated by time, friends, circumstances, and study.
3) Were you ever a Christian from age 12 up?
I considered myself one a few times as a young adult, though not a fundamentalist or Born Again.
4) Have you ever read the bible?
Yes. New Testament twice; started on Old Testament and stopped somewhere, I think, in Kings.
5) Have you ever owned and studied a bible dictionary or bible commentary?
Yes, while reading the Bible. I have also read approximately a dozen books about the Bible and history of the times — some designed to persuade (ie Evidence That Demands a Verdict ; others by scholars ie Randall Helms and Bart Ehrman)
6) Are whatever beliefs you have based on personal study, analysis, obervation and application?
As far as I can tell, yes. My experiences with Christians and churches have been almost uniformly positive.
7) With whom do you communicate your deepest thoughts and questions?
No single person or venue. Husband, friends, parents, teachers, writers, internet.
Stephen #248:
You forget that the term for “love of wisdom” is “philosophy.” Religion is simply one form of philosophy. There are religious people who fail to think deeply or live their lives with attention, and non-religious people who do both. And, as you point out, vice versa.
You describe a way of living which is not very wise. If you expect atheists to recognize that, then you’re appealing to values we already hold without the belief in God.
What is with Stephan and his obsession with consumerism?
Ever notice how all the big preachers seem to be large consumers of expensive luxury goods?
Don’t know what he’s talkin about. Why is it so hard for godbots to understand how easy it is to not believe in myths and be happy? They do it everyday and yet they act like we must be miserable with out a sky daddy. It’s so… juvenile.
You do realize that the current president, an evangelical christian, informed americans it was their patriotic duty to go out and spend in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks.
One could go through point by point and show how full of shit you. But frankly, you are not worth the time.
On further reading, I must add that there is great confusion about who is God and who is not God. A married evangelical leader who has homosexual sex and does drugs monthly is not God. Pastorman who promises a sevenfold return on your investment is not God. Anyone who cares not for God’s earth in view of God’s Heaven (or for any other reason) is not God. In fact, no one on this earth is God or anything like Him. It is folly to look upon any person or titleholder, or any other thing in an attempt to make a comparison with God.
This is principally because we have two things God doesn’t have, sin and free will. I’ll take the easy one first. God doesn’t lie. Whatever He said He would do He has done or will do. He literally is His Word. We can and do change our minds on an hourly basis, God can’t and God doesn’t. Consequently, He is truthworthy and reliable. We are not; we always disappoint.
Sin is despicable to God. He has tried so many things to deal with us, fire, floods, damnation, curses, etc. None of it worked. And yet he still loved our bad a—– anyway and decided on a plan of salvation, His only Son. We even have an attitude about that. Why can’t there be another way? How can this lowly carpenter be the savior of the world when there are Queen Elizabeth’s and Bill Gates’, and Warren Buffett’s, and Oprah’s. Now they have power.
God’s job is harder. He’s trying to get you straight forever, not just get you warm this winter. That is much harder to accomplish than paying a light bill and building a house. Everything we have and want is destructible and must be cared for, cleaned, protected, insured, maintained, replaced, etc. And all of it is one tsunami, hurricane, fire, tornado, flood, etc. from going back to ground zero. Not so for you. Once your body is destroyed by death, no set of blueprints on earth can build you back. You are not replaceable. No one can fix you or help you. Only you can complete the plan God made for you. I’m fairly sure you already know how to start.
Accept Jesus as your Savior, this time by learining about Him for yourself. Once you learn about Him, you will believe that He died so that you can be saved forever. Confess that you have been WRONG. Don’t sweat it. He is not the a– that we are. He loves you no matter what.
That’s some high-density crazy.
I haven’t done anything I need to be saved from or over. I have done nothing so heinous as to require the murder of another human. I’m not so arrogant that I think the universe revolves around me and my continued existence after this body dies.
Grow up.
Yawn.
Got any evidence for your particular version of god Lightbulb?
Lightbulb #254 wrote:
On further reading your post, I should point out that you appear to be confused about what we atheists are and are not asking about God. We are not asking “who is God and who is not God?”
We start out by asking “Does God exist?” And we have come to a different conclusion than you. If you wish to meet us on common ground, you must go back to this first question — is there a God?
Tell me — might the answer be “no?” If it is, would or could you both discover and accept that, if you have only asked yourself questions about what God is like?
PZ
Thanks for making me cry at the simple beauty of your creed.
Stephan wrote:
An American atheist’s creed
I believe in time,
(So I waste it away in front of my TV)
matter, and energy,
(Which I do little-to-nothing with)
which make up the whole of the world.
(Or as much of the world as my TV shows me)
…
[drivel snipped]
That is one of the most miserable and stupefyingly-limited things I have ever read. Is your worldview really so blinkered that you see religion and consumerism and absolutely nothing else?
Can you really see no difference between love and “lie[s] that we no nothing about”? Can you really see no difference between beauty and crass consumerism? Is Muhammad/Zeus/Jesus all that separates these things in your eyes? If so how? Are you unable to experience love without a god watching in the background? Are you unable to appreciate beauty without constantly thinking that “god did it”? If so, I truly pity you.
You remind me of the most pathetic sight (in both the literal and more usual sense of the word) that I have ever seen. It was in Birmingham (England) about five years ago, and shortly before Christmas (which, yes, most atheists celebrate, even if they don’t take the virgin-rape but seriously). Happy people (a good fraction of them atheists, if British demographics are anything to go by) were milling around, preparing to spend a happy day with their families and loved ones. Standing out from the crowd, however, was an old man with a look of abject misery on his face. He was holding a sign which read, “The fear of God is all the love that man needs”. Needless to say, he was completely alone.
But Jeff, you are missing the point completely, it is not about your actions. It is completely meaningless what you do. It is what you believe at the time of your death. The mass murderer who accepts Jesus on the deathbed is more worthy of praise and an eternity of be a yes man for god then the atheist who attempts to live an ethical life and has done much to improve the life quality of the people around that person.
On a different tangent, this is what I hope Lightbulb looks like.
MAJeff # 250
Have you read the book of Isaiah? What you mention is not the half of what God is willing or able to do. He is just kind enough to have a soft spot for us. The people murdered Jesus, obviously not realizing that they were following a plan that would benefit “the world” forever. To the extent that it hurt Jesus at all, He was large and in charge just three days later. If they had realized the truth….it wouldn’t have mattered. Things have to go God’s way in the end.
Thanks Sastra. We can’t understand each other or life unless we ask and study. Blogging is enlightening, too.
Things have to go God’s way in the end.
Just so.
I am still waiting for some actual evidence for lightbulbs version of god.
I am still waiting for some actual evidence for lightbulbs version of god.
Well, you feel love. Therefore, God.
Lightbulb #252 wrote:
You’re welcome, Lightbulb :)
I asked:
Could you be wrong? Is it possible that God does not exist?
If so, how would or could you both discover and accept this?
I have been told that as an Atheist I can’t feel love.
What to do with my dreary empty life.
What to do with my dreary empty life.
Beer? Clam Chowder? Not a bad start.
A nice hot cup of coffee will have to do for now.
(1) Atheists don’t believe in God, so they must be very unhappy.
(2) Atheists don’t believe in God, because they’re much happier not believing in God.
You know, I wish they’d pick a horse and ride it. One or the other. Not both.
Lightbulb,
You are very deluded if you think that you can waltz in here and spout the Bible and explain God to us and in your dark little mind think “they probably don’t know this and when I tell them they will all fall to their knees and repent and be saved.” We don’t live in your imaginary world and has been mentioned to you, you will have to go back to the beginning, back to “Is there a God?”.
Leave out the crap about quoting the Bible. We’ve read it, found it to be unfounded, sometimes evil, mostly boring and very little of it of value. Stop trying to explain to us who God is and what character values he has. He’s imaginary. No amount of fleshing out a story book character will make us believe that he’s real.
You are like an American in Paris who thinks that if he speaks LOUDER and s l o w e r that he will be understood. Chances are the Parisians can understand you but find you obnoxious and ignorant. You need to learn the language first. Come back when you can speak evidence and reason.
You just sound like a dumb ass now.
That’s not the way it’s usually pitched. Greatest sacrifice, or greatest minor inconvenience?
How fucked up is that?
God punked his own son on the cross to save us.
Fuckin twisted bullshit.
He loved us so much he had his son tortured… makes perfect sense.
He loved us so much he had his son tortured… makes perfect sense.
And we get to eat him and drink his blood (sometimes real, sometimes symbol, sometimes somewhere in between), and then live forever!
I just looked outside.
Does anyone have an ark handy?
Not only did he sacrifice his son …god and his son are one and the same.
Not to mention their friend the holy ghost.
Rick T, I doubt that Lightbulb has any intention of saving we heathens. Call it the safest way for a true believer to face down the forces of hell in order to show how pure his faith is. I am sure that in the evangelical realm, they think of us as being the worst degenerates.
@254
“Sin is despicable to God. He has tried so many things to deal with us, fire, floods, damnation, curses, etc. None of it worked. And yet he still loved our bad a—– anyway and decided on a plan of salvation, His only Son. We even have an attitude about that. Why can’t there be another way?”
I love my kids, but they just don’t see it. I’ve tried beating them, spanking them, starving them, locking them in the closet for weeks on end… None of it worked. I love them anyway, of course. So I’m thinking of just killing the dog. They’ll probably have an attitude about that, too.
Just in case anyone hasn’t seen it, especially you guys in the #273 area, take a look at Mr Deity, Episode Two, “Mr. Deity and the Really Big Favor” at http://www.mrdeity.com.
PZ, the creed is a big hit and I think it’s worthy of permanent placement somewhere on your site. I posted it in the main think tank at http://www.atheistthinktank.net (with proper attribution, of course) and people are already making bumperstickers with it.
For some reason this all puts me in mind of Monty Python’s celebrated “Galaxy Song” (easily found on Youtube):
Just remember that you’re standing on a planet that’s evolving
And revolving at 900 miles an hour
That’s orbiting at 19 miles a second, so it’s reckoned
A sun that is the source of all our power
The sun and you and me, and all the stars that we can see
Are moving at a million miles a day
In an outer spiral arm, at 40,000 miles an hour
Of the galaxy we call the Milky Way
Our galaxy itself contains 100 billion stars
It’s 100,000 light-years side-to-side
It bulges in the middle, 16,000 light-years thick
But out by us it’s just 3000 light-years wide
We’re 30,000 light-years from galactic central point
We go round every 200 million years
And our galaxy is only one of millions of billions
In this amazing and expanding universe
The universe itself keeps on expanding and expanding
In all of the directions it can whiz
As fast as it can go, at the speed of light you know
Twelve million miles a minute and that’s the fastest speed there is
So remember, when you’re feeling very small and insecure
How amazingly unlikely is your birth
And pray that there’s intelligent life somewhere up in space
Because there’s bugger all down here on Earth
@ #50: Why are theists so bad at art and creativity in general?
While the answer of Bach is right on, and relevant, the question still should be asked of art today (witness Christian Rock, or Thomas Kinkade). Part of the answer is that in the days of great theist works of art of yore (Bach, Michaelangelo, etc.) The Church was the entity with all the money. If you wanted your art funded, you made it for The Church. Just because Michaelangelo painted the Sistine Chapel for the Vatican does not mean his heart of hearts resembled that of Jerry Fallwell. In fact, both Leonardo and Michaelangelo were probably gay, and if they were around today, and had the freedom of lifestyle choice we enjoy (for now at least) they would be living in lofts in Chelsea and attending openings at Dietch Projects, not living in Colorado Springs and making devotional murals for Ted Haggard.
The reason we are not seeing anything resembling good art out of the religious masses in this country is because of the general intellectual and creative bankruptcy of religion. In other words, the people with the get-up-and-go who have got up and gone, because they now have the choice. Smart, creative people migrate to centers of higher education and urban areas where they are exposed to a variety of opinions, and, when given the option, frequently jettison their simplistic beliefs.
I know a lot of artists. None of them are Christians, few of them are theists at all, and none of them are Republicans either, for that matter.
Your right Janine. I posted a comment similar to yours a few weeks ago. I simply thought that my little rant would point out the absurdity of coming to a web site with little or no knowledge of what we are about here, how educated we are on these topics and even what an atheist or agnostic is. Such ignorance of all this is like bringing a knife to a gun fight but also not knowing who you are fighting or for what reason. Total, willful ignorance.
Just because Lightbulb can make sense of a fable in his head (if it’s not scrutinized too closely) doesn’t make it true or plausible. Explaining the ins and outs of the fable to us, like it would make us have a lightbulb moment, is comical but also insulting.
eugene X #281 wrote:
Interesting. I’m an artist and most of the ones I know are surprised to find out I don’t believe in God. They don’t understand how an artist can be an atheist because how else can I explain beauty?
Of course, I’m in a small town and we’re not usually dealing with High End Art or artistes. Or, I might add, high end apologetics.
Sastra,
I actually find myself surrounded by a vague new age vibe at my theater. While they all are perfect heathens in regards to jeebus, they still hold onto all sorts of woo. I do hear alot of the “kill to dissect” rhetoric though. Apparently, you can’t be an artist without a love for mystery. Or as they would say, “letting the mystery be.” It’s rather frustrating sometimes.
Though I can agree that I know next to no artists that are republican. But they do span dems, independents, and greens.
@ No. 247
1) were you born atheist or agnostic?
No, I was born a baby without religious beliefs. I was, however, raised in a largely atheist household (and a mildly Christian school) with a good understanding of various religions. I was raised to question what I was told by parents who would accept any beliefs I might come to.
2)If you adopted your beliefs, at what age and under what circumstances (discipleship, life problems, parents, friends)?
I have more or less always been an atheist, with some wavering towards a sort of vague pantheism in my teens. My atheism has grown stronger as I have given more consideration to these matters.
3) Were you ever a Christian from age 12 up?
No
4) Have you ever read the bible?
Yes – I never got round to reading it right through, but I was brought up knowing it well and have studied various bits of it since. I probably have a better understanding of what it actually contains than many Christians.
5) Have you ever owned and studied a bible dictionary or bible commentary?
Yes, have owned and briefly studied – but got fed up because it was deciding what had happened in prehistory based purely on the content of the Bible, and gave no consideration to inaccuracies in translation.
6) Are whatever beliefs you have based on personal study, analysis, obervation and application?
Yes, almost entirely. I see no evidence for the existence of God, and no-one has yet provided me with any. I also choose not to worship the Christian God because, as presented in the Bible and by most Christians, he is a tyrant, and I do not worship tyrants. Any God worth worshiping would not punish me for using my senses and reason and living my life as best I can.
7) With whom do you communicate your deepest thoughts and questions?
My boyfriend, parents, brother, housemate, the internet, friends – various people, depending on circumstances.
@ 261
“But Jeff, you are missing the point completely, it is not about your actions. It is completely meaningless what you do. It is what you believe at the time of your death. The mass murderer who accepts Jesus on the deathbed is more worthy of praise and an eternity of be a yes man for god then the atheist who attempts to live an ethical life and has done much to improve the life quality of the people around that person.”
WOW! And you theists have a hard time wondering why we don’t accept your religion…Let’s see… a lifetime in eternity with a mass murderer…It sounds so tempting!
Poor me. I guess I’m doomed to eternal hell with the ethical athiests.
Do you people ever stop to listen to yourselves?
1) were you born atheist or agnostic?
Of course, everybody is. I was born without the knowledge, or belief in, any religion’s god. Knowledge of deities, and the cult of worshipping, came later–and solely from human sources.
2)If you adopted your beliefs, at what age and under what circumstances (discipleship, life problems, parents, friends)?
Around 15. I heard a radio show with people from various religions and denominations arguing about the, then new, Jesus Christ Superstar. They were pointing out the musical’s flaws and character distortions, and arguing among themselves over whose particular worldview was the path to salvation. They sounded silly and childish. I looked around and saw other disturbing things. I couldn’t explain it, but there was something wrong with religion, too many contradictions. There was something “untruthful” about it all.
A few years later I opened a book by J. Krishnamurti, and a light went on. Krishnamurti said stuff like this, “In oneself lies the whole world and if you know how to look and learn, the door is there and the key is in your hand. Nobody on earth can give you either the key or the door to open, except yourself.”
And this,
“”Truth is a pathless land.” Man cannot come to it through any organization, through any creed, through any dogma, priest or ritual, not through any philosophic knowledge or psychological technique.”
I realized he was right, and I lost interest in religion and organized “paths to truth”.
3) Were you ever a Christian from age 12 up?
Not really.
4) Have you ever read the bible?
Parts of it. I grew up in church. I’ve read enough to know that if you can make people believe that the bible is the literal, inerrant word of God then you can make them believe anything.
5) Have you ever owned and studied a bible dictionary or bible commentary?
I don’t think so.
6) Are whatever beliefs you have based on personal study, analysis, obervation and application?
Absolutely. So is my lack of beliefs.
7) With whom do you communicate your deepest thoughts and questions?
Myself.
I think that will be enough to help me understand. If I can do the same for you, please ask. By the way, if you have the capacity to love, you have God, whether you want Him or not. Feel free to thank Him every now and them.
Why is God a “Him”? Has it occurred to you that the mystery behind existence may not be a personality?
heard a radio show with people from various religions and denominations arguing about the, then new, Jesus Christ Superstar. They were pointing out the musical’s flaws and character distortions, and arguing among themselves over whose particular worldview was the path to salvation.
You know what I loved about Superstar (and Kazantzakis’s “Last Temptation”) is that they both fleshed out and made a more complex, more human character out of Judas. He really did get screwed, especially for doing exactly what we’re supposed to believe was his duty from God. (Then again, he could have been an asshole, too. Or a plot device.)
Kay (#286): Janine (#261) was being sarcastic. I think that means you two are in pretty close agreement on the subject.
Lightbulb #247:
1) Were you born atheist or agnostic?
2) If you adopted your beliefs, at what age and under what circumstances (discipleship, life problems, parents, friends)?
3) Were you ever a Christian from age 12 up?
4) Have you ever read the bible?
5) Have you ever owned and studied a bible dictionary or bible commentary?
6) Are whatever beliefs you have based on personal study, analysis, obervation and application?
7) With whom do you communicate your deepest thoughts and questions?