financialwar
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If you have to ask this stupid question, then you are pretty stupid.
Do you realise your answer gives absolutely no indication of which way you lean?If you have to ask this stupid question, then you are pretty stupid.
What.Let me rephrase, if you have to seek the 'truth', because you don't know the truth, you're pretty stupid.
Does that apply to every question?Let me rephrase, if you have to seek the 'truth', because you don't know the truth, you're pretty stupid.
Not sure which comment that was directed at. But check these examples of pluralism and tell me how many you have issues with:Apathy is really terrible.
so is pluralism.
I'm wondering why you take such issue with a mere point of view. Surely there can be no outwardly visible negatives to someone having pluralistic religious beliefs .... people who think all religions are equal are hardly going to fly planes into buildings. Although I believe people are misguided in having any religious belief at all, I would not be expressing that thought so forcefully (probably not at all) were it not for the negative impact of religion on society (terrorism, creationism, infant indoctrination, imposition of their particular brand of moral standards on others, .....). And that negative impact comes about mainly because people believe that their particular religious fantasy is the correct one. What exactly is the negative impact on society of religious pluralism? Who suffers?[2]
I don't think saying that all cultures for example are the same is a viable solution (yet people do that with religious pluralism)
**religious pluralism, or though it can extend to other forms in a more limited context. Consider below:
For example a better philosophical definition of pluralism:
a. The doctrine that reality is composed of many ultimate substances.
b. The belief that no single explanatory system or view of reality can account for all the phenomena of life.
Particularly both of these definitions together lead to the inevitable conclusion, that each worldview is right, which in essence because of the differences, can lead to apathy or rejecting every worldview, except that of pluralism.
There is a logical problem in pluralism though:
A. Assume pluralism is true (philosophically)
B. As the definition of pluralism would state that no single explanatory system or view can account for all the phenomena of life.
C. Therefore pluralism cannot be COMPLETELY true, negating or undermining A,
hence a contradiction.
The only point for disagreement is then on the definition (B).
But that is EXACTLY what the vast majority of christians do.@braintic
"Who suffers?"
Who would like a religious a-la-carte menu. Pick and choose the bits you want and throw out the bits you don't like.