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Young Philosophers Forum Philosophy and general discussion for young philosophers ages 13 - 17.

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  #21 (permalink)  
Old 06-06-2008, 06:43 PM
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That's the cool thing about kids. Nine year olds, if you read Piaget, are in the concrete operational stage of cognitive development. They think very pragmatically, which is why when they get together they spend more time on the rules than the game. So kids that age haven't really developed very abstract reasoning (though they're at the upper end of the concrete operational stage). Thus, they can ask extremely practical questions that can undermine all this abstract stuff we pontificate about.
And the abstract reasoning will help them understand spiritual literature for what it is - ah, the value of good teachers!
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Old 06-06-2008, 11:20 PM
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And the abstract reasoning will help them understand spiritual literature for what it is...
Hehe, i.e. they take it very literally when they are young and are thus easily indoctrinated. Then when they develop abstract reasoning and understand the concept of transcendency, they rationalize these indoctrinated ideas into some kind of metaphysical truth system. Interesting how the belief grows with the person -- and if the person grows up all the way into Aquinas then that childlike concrete belief can fill volumes of carefully reasoned text.
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Old 06-06-2008, 11:33 PM
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God iff..........

Now days to me it seems that almost every one in the world lives in the world of "iff". For all our action we feel that their needs to be a reason, a data that can support our actions, ideas and way of life! But the truth is that their are some categories that do not lie in the the empirical world! Their are no reason why emotion are so real! Why a cry of another human make u sad, why certain chemical reaction does what it does! God is a feeling, a reason for some people to do so and so, go IS A METAPHOR for good action (that is it meant to be!)
I really dont care whether their is a god or not! To me what is important that we all do good and live a good life, meaning that help others as much as we POSSIBLY can!
Religious books are like set of good stories that we can learn from. Like all stories some are rubbish and some are fascinating!
So at the end it comes down to u! Believe me now days people do what ever they want and the ****s that some of us do even got satan saying," man do I need to retire and let this guys replace me?! "

We human have the ability to make the purest thing in the world so dirty and the most dirty thing in the world a form of purity!
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Old 06-06-2008, 11:42 PM
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Hehe, i.e. they take it very literally when they are young and are thus easily indoctrinated. Then when they develop abstract reasoning and understand the concept of transcendency, they rationalize these indoctrinated ideas into some kind of metaphysical truth system. Interesting how the belief grows with the person -- and if the person grows up all the way into Aquinas then that childlike concrete belief can fill volumes of carefully reasoned text.
Thus the value of a good teacher. Such a figure will be able to guide the child away from taking metaphysics too seriously. Not to mention rooting out some of the sillier doctrines proclaimed by some spiritual leaders - like the idea that the Noah flood story is literally true.

The good teacher will help the child understand the Noah story, so that the story has value and meaning without being historically accurate.
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Old 06-07-2008, 02:32 AM
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Thus the value of a good teacher. Such a figure will be able to guide the child away from taking metaphysics too seriously.
A 9 year old can't learn metaphysics to begin with. Give a 9 year old a metaphysical lesson and they'll never get the meta part. Metaphysics is inherently abstract and inherently rooted in language and logical statements. Even things like arithmetic are concrete to a 9 year old. To say that 4x5=20 is a recitation for a 9 year old, not some kind of statement about universals.
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Old 06-22-2008, 09:15 PM
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Re: Athiests...

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A 9 year old can't learn metaphysics to begin with.
Unless the 9 year old is JS Mill

But you're right, metaphysics is beyond their capability at such a young age.
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Old 06-22-2008, 10:02 PM
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Re: Athiests...

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Originally Posted by de Silentio View Post
So religion in and of itself keeps us divided as a race? Religion in and of itself isn't damaging, in fact, many religions (and churches for that matter) preach that we should unite, rather those who follow a certain religion do or not is not necessarily a product of that religion. I find that the Human desire to be better than their neighbor is more damaging than religion. Religion is just an easy target to point a finger at.

Those who find religious beliefs silly and dumb can be just as damaging to human relations as any religion.
Although I don't believe religion is silly and dumb, I do think it divides us...If there are four different religions, each telling their believers to unite, what does that give us? If there were only one religion, your arguement would be much more valid...But if we have many "united" groups, they will compete by human nature. Religion opens the door for people to desire to be better then their neighbor. Even the religions that don't discriminate against others are putting a label on their people, and in a way, alienating them.
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Old 06-22-2008, 11:05 PM
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Re: Athiests...

Why must a person be draged into being termed an atheist, with all the connotations the righteous tend to attitibute to THE GODLESS. What would we be just left alone. I myself do not have outrageous supernatural beliefs, I simply do not believe theirs [ the faithful]. This is the real affiction that believers bring upon their brothers and sister, they want you to feel guilty for thinking independently. Did you ever watch, "The Invasion Of The Body Snatchers",--that old movie, I think they have done a remake of it. Don't you think the stimulus for that movie was the Christian born again movement? They are coming for you. its for the best, its futile to resist.

The chosen people---what balls, and the Christians believe it-----both hands now, can you find your own ass!!

Last edited by boagie; 06-23-2008 at 08:07 AM.
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Old 06-23-2008, 09:54 AM
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Re: Athiests...

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Originally Posted by boagie View Post
Why must a person be draged into being termed an atheist, with all the connotations the righteous tend to attitibute to THE GODLESS. What would we be just left alone. I myself do not have outrageous supernatural beliefs, I simply do not believe theirs [ the faithful]. This is the real affiction that believers bring upon their brothers and sister, they want you to feel guilty for thinking independently. Did you ever watch, "The Invasion Of The Body Snatchers",--that old movie, I think they have done a remake of it. Don't you think the stimulus for that movie was the Christian born again movement? They are coming for you. its for the best, its futile to resist.

The chosen people---what balls, and the Christians believe it-----both hands now, can you find your own ass!!
Thanks for putting that up, its a really good point. Independent thought, to me, seems like it should be going hand in hand with religion.
But, well, its obviously not.
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Old 06-23-2008, 10:16 AM
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Re: Athiests...

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Originally Posted by boagie View Post
Why must a person be draged into being termed an atheist, with all the connotations the righteous tend to attribute to THE GODLESS. What would we be just left alone. I myself do not have outrageous supernatural beliefs, I simply do not believe theirs [ the faithful]. This is the real affiction that believers bring upon their brothers and sister, they want you to feel guilty for thinking independently. Did you ever watch, "The Invasion Of The Body Snatchers",--that old movie, I think they have done a remake of it. Don't you think the stimulus for that movie was the Christian born again movement? They are coming for you. its for the best, its futile to resist.

The chosen people---what balls, and the Christians believe it-----both hands now, can you find your own ass!!
I hear you Boagie! But isn't atheism just another belief system? when I really think about it, it is not a specification of religion to have a God, so being atheistic (non-god) doesn't make you non-religious or non-belief- systemic.

The latter (non-belief-systemic) would be an anti-belief system stance, but wouldn't an anti-belief system still be a belief system which believes belief systems are wrong?

How do you qualify atheism as different from religion/belief systems?

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