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Of course I'm not forcing you to do anything if you don't want to, but seriously, what have you got to lose? Five seconds of your life?
How can you just say that whoever believes in the afterlife is secretly frightened of dying? Why it is any less likely that they think irrational thoughts and really believe them?
It depends on the level of gullibillity. The first person is just a moral coward, not able to face the facts, so invents a story to keep themselves sane. The second is just plain ignorance, and can be taught how to think for themselves. In other words, the second isn't as much of a problem, because you can educate and raise awareness.
However you can't do anything against the first.
Personally, I'd say it is a bit of a stretch, actually.it's not too much of a stretch just to suggest that the essence of whatever makes us conscious, different from plants or AIs (call it a soul, idk), goes on and inhabits another organism.
Hurr. Why are you posting this? Why are you on this forum? Why are you even alive?Because you're deluding yourself that what you want to feel is true. Desirability does not imply truth. It can soothe your conscience, keep your anxiety at bay, but you're not doing it because it's right; you're doing it because else you'll be a sad sack without purpose.
What you think and feel has a reason, too, even if you're not aware of it. "Emotional reasoning" is entirely bullshit. It validates the notion of doing things just because we feel like it, even when they are entirely retarded actions. By the same logic, I could ask: why can't a person murder their neighbour, because it's just what they think and feel? Whatever you think and feel is NOT a rational reason to do anything at all. Realise that there is a large discrepancy between what your emotions tell you and what is actually right. I'm trying to do what is actually right, instead of assuaging my emotions with some cock-and-bull-story.
But you can think rationally, or not. Watershed is not suggesting an alternative to thinking. He just wants people to think rationally.On the contrary, Watershed, "whatever you think and feel" is the only rational reason to do things.
I suppose, yes. I've said it a million times before and I'll say it again: truth has no inherent value. I don't see the point in thinking rationally when it comes to death and the afterlife. What you believe in will not change the truth of it; it only affects what you feel while still alive. If something "can soothe your conscience" and "keep your anxiety at bay", then it's all good. And as for "not doing it because it's right" - I don't really believe rights and wrongs exist beyond the realm of "whatever we think and feel".But you can think rationally, or not. Watershed is not suggesting an alternative to thinking. He just wants people to think rationally.
What are you and he even arguing about? Whether it is wrong to delude oneself?
The answer in your case is apparently:Why would you put yourself through the hell of wasting time and energy on a completely vacuous, purposeless concept, when you could be spending it on something useful?
...which is not significantly more satisfying than Cirrus' post. Something simply being enjoyable is a valid reason for posting on TCoD, and it's also a valid reason for believing in an afterlife. In any case, I doubt she would be much happier if she shared your point of view.i like social interaction
Yes, but that's pretty much the case with this whole afterlife discussion, isn't it? I can't know for sure, but I can make a pretty good guess.To say that deluding oneself into happiness is 'all good' is no better than saying it is 'all bad'. You and Watershed both are just guessing what would happen if lots of people deluded themselves in this way, and presenting each guess as a fact. Admit that nobody could possibly know whether it would be good or bad.
I think one of my worse qualities is that I am never very consistent in what I stand for... mostly because I enjoy debates and arguments. But hope, happiness and meaning are good things. Of course, faith in God may very well lead to horrible things too. And I'd rather people managed to get by without it. But it's not always a bad thing.Would you say the same thing to people who say that faith in God brings them hope and happiness and meaning, MD?
I'm quite sure most people who believe in an afterlife are not inclined to cause war and terror. I admit, though, that it's hard for me to know whether or not such faith makes you "happier" - but I can only assume that it arises and sticks in the first place because the thought of it brings you some sense of comfort, security or satisfaction. Of course, it may still have less-than-desirable consequences... but, once again, that's a possibility - maybe even a probability - but not an inevitability.My point is that I have no evidence that people who believe in the afterlife are happier - happiness can not be measured any way - or that widespread belief in the afterlife, as we have now, has not caused war, terror and the cheapening of lives.
A much better guess can be made whether there is an afterlife than whether believing in it is good.
Maybe, but I doubt that's true for everyone, and I'm guessing there are plenty of people who believe in an afterlife but wouldn't call themselves "religious". Besides - in many cases I think unhappiness leads to religion, not the other way around, but that's a different topic.atheists describe themselves as happier than religious people