But your meaning for car is not universal because I just demonstrated that people can use cars for different things and also can travel to different places with a car and that the use of a car is most of all *entirely* dependent on someone's choice. A car has no universal purpose, people use cars and therefore the purpose of a car is simply to be used for what the person who uses it wants it for.
No, that is really not true, just as I said, if someone asks someone what a car is for, and that person says, "to cook KFC", then this person is mentally handicapped, this is because we already know what a car is for.
Moreover you have not even touched the actual point of using the analogy.
If I say, "the purpose of a car is what you make of it and each answer is equally true and valid", then you have really taken the meaning out of what is meant by a car.
Similarly, if you are just expressing possiblity, again that means ur initial statement that "atheists have no purpose in life and this is clear to everyone" is unfounded, because if what you're just throwing around is a "possibility" it's not exactly "clear", is it?
You are simply misunderstanding me at this point, I am refuting the claim that, "the meaning of life is what you make of it", and in doing so, I say that it is possible that there can be multiple parts to an answer "what is the meaning of life", what I mean by this is that, "the meaning of life is A, B, AND C", that is all that I meant.
Not that, "the meaning of life is A", and "the meaning of life is not-A"
Furthermore, you throw around words like irrationality and meaningless, but how exactly is an individual's ability to attach their own individual purpose to their own life independent of a universal meaning which does not necessarily exist, irrational and meaningless? All you are presenting is a circular argument based on your definition that meaning has to be universal and your only reason why is because you hold any other view as irrational or meaningless without actually demonstrating why.
Well you need to quote me exactly where I said such and such is irrational or meaningless so I can know the context of what I said. Objecting to my word usage is not an argument. You then accuse me of using a circular argument when that is not at all true. Firstly, it is you who first used the adjective, "universal", so you need to define this term precisely because you are using it ambiguously.
Secondly, I am merely saying that if you say that meaning is what you make of it, then you take meaning out of it.
In terms of your argument
"- The meaning of life is A
- The meaning of life is not-A
To affirm both of these statements results in the pain of irrationality, and there is no need to deal with those who are comfortable with irrationality"
The major flaw in this is you forget that those two views aren't held by the same person, they don't contradict because they are both opinions and a sense of purpose attached to the individual lives of two different people. Your "proof" would only apply if it was the same person affirming both, but it isn't.
No, the view is held by the meaning-relativist. If you say, "the meaning of life is what you make of it"
Then if 2 people say contradictory things, the person who says, "the meaning of life is what you make of it", has to affirm both contradictory statements. If he denies one of them, then he isn't true to his claim, "the meaning of life is what you make of it"
To demonstrate the flaw in your proof let me use an analogy of two sticks
-Person A holds the purpose of the two sticks to be to create fire
-Person B holds the purpose of the two sticks to be to create music
You cannot then go on to conclude that they contradict each other and therefore this is meaningless because the point is both people have equally valid purposes for the stick dependent on their frame of reference.
Sure, but two sticks can have multiple purposes.
Both Person A and Person B are only partially correct, the full purposes of a stick are very many, but if you say, "the purpose of two sticks is anyhting you want it to be", then the person who says, "the purpose of two sticks is to eat bananas", then such a person's opinion is as equally valid as Person A and B.