You're right, I hated my teachers in elementary school.
Radical Christianity Thread
Are you seriously trying to argue against abstract descriptions of ideas? I think you've just dismissed half of philosophy and mathematics in a single sentence there.
Not very many americans go to Christian academies, they're expensive (being capitalist institutions it makes sense why they preach capitalism).
The average americans religious indoctrination is making macaroni pictures of jesus and thinking about how to not miss the beginning of the football game
I have an invisible pet dinosaur who ensures that the atmosphere of the earth doesn't suddenly disappear. If you deny this explanation you are SCARED of his existence
All of these Russell’s Teapot-tier arguments are fallacious circular arguments. I know you’re probably trying to act clever with your “le invisible XYZ” memes, but that’s literally bottom of the barrel strawman’ing. You should actually read the arguments for the existence of a Creator and stop acting so infantile.
I'm arguing against ideas being viewed as some entity in of itself with some power outside of material society or people, not abstraction. Trying to endlessly metaphorically compare things isn't necessarily "good" either. Using the "more then half" argument in regards to philosophy isn't really a good arguement btw, just because there is sizable breadth of philosophy that argues or does one thing doesn't make that philosophy or method of understanding "correct". Otherwise we would have to accept a lot of stupid and contridctory philosophies as "correct".
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I grew up going to church. I hated the family friendly nature of it given that it was a small Prot church full of kids and old people and left when I was young edgy atheist teenager. I've always thought there was something to be worth learning from the Bible though, mostly from the teachings of Jesus himself. I'm aware that there are Christian leftists despite their small influence. As far as I'm concerned, no one should force someone to be religious and no one should force someone to be an atheist. It seems like a mere individual choice to make on one's own part, however absurd it may seem. Christian art is pretty cool though.
I have to ask a few questions though:
How do you reconcile materialism with arguments for the existence for God? Matter is the fundamental substance in nature, no? What's the best argument that a ChristCom would provide in spite of this?
Who would you recommend listening to for Christian Marxism? Are there any contemporary public thinkers in liberation theology? The only one I know of at the moment is Cornel West, and he's just a democratic socialist. And what would you recommend for essential reading on this topic?
How can Christianity, especially in today's world, be 'radical'? The Catholic church has written decrees against socialism and communism. It seems to me like the majority of contemporary Christians are reactionaries, liberals, conservatives and some are even fascists. Are there even any Christians who would support revolution? Matthew 5:44 says "Love your enemies" and Romans 13 advocates to submit to your authority. I know Christians can be politically diverse, but all of them seem to advocate for nonviolence.
really depressing
im an atheist too but if you really think that edgy mallgoth dismissal of "if god where he is huh" is a good argument against religion, one of the most enduring and ubiquitous aspects of human social life, you are a retard and a detriment to any serious conversation
while I'm here can someone rec me good christcom essays
Well, I wasn't arguing in favor of that and I don't think any sane person would disagree with you.
Obviously labeling part of a system doesn't give that part magic powers outside outside of the confines of the system it exists within. Labeling certain arrangements of atoms as "viruses" doesn't give them powers beyond those intrinsic to their component atoms, but it is still useful to label them in order to study them.