That's just aweful

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That's just aweful

Postby Cyborg Girl » Wed Dec 04, 2013 1:19 am

From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Awe

Awe has recently become a topic of interest in atheist groups, in response to statements from some religious individuals who say that atheists do not experience awe, or that experiencing awe makes one spiritual or religious, rather than an atheist. For example, see Oprah's comment that she would not consider swimmer Diana Nyad an atheist because Nyad experiences awe, as well as the response to this video by interfaith activist Chris Stedman.[16]
Awe is often tied to religion, but awe can also be secular. For more examples, see the writings on being an "aweist"[17] by sociologist and atheist Phil Zuckerman, the book Religion for Atheists[18] by author Alain de Botton, and the video on how secular institutions should inspire awe by performance philosopher Jason Silva.[19]


I can't believe people actually argue about this. The stupid, it burns!

Edit: I'd also point out that even a diehard atheist will have a religious experience if you wave a strong enough magnet around the right part of her brain.
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Re: That's just aweful

Postby cid » Wed Dec 04, 2013 1:28 am

Puts a whole new meaning to the phrase "shock and awe", dunnit???
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Re: That's just aweful

Postby Sigma_Orionis » Wed Dec 04, 2013 2:08 am

They would be much more productive picking their collective noses......
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Re: That's just aweful

Postby The Supreme Canuck » Wed Dec 04, 2013 4:53 am

I'm an atheist. I experience awe. I have zero religious feeling when I do so.

Boy, that was easy to disprove...

:roll:
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Re: That's just aweful

Postby SciFiFisher » Wed Dec 04, 2013 4:58 am

The Supreme Canuck wrote:I'm an atheist. I experience awe. I have zero religious feeling when I do so.

Boy, that was easy to disprove...

:roll:


I'm sorry your evidence is merely anecdotal and therefore is not certified proof. You must conduct a double blind study in a verifiable, reproducible, and scientific method. Until then you will be considered a catholic who has gone astray. :P
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Re: That's just aweful

Postby The Supreme Canuck » Wed Dec 04, 2013 5:08 am

*Ahem*

Bite me.

:P
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Re: That's just aweful

Postby code monkey » Wed Dec 04, 2013 5:22 am

fisher, you left out the data analysis.

tsc, how do you define the terms 'awe' and 'religious feeling'?

now you 2 play nicely.
and still i persist in wondering whether folly must always be our nemesis. edgar pangborn

come gentle night. come loving black browed night
give me my romeo. and when he shall die
take him and cut him out in little stars
and he will make the face of heaven so fine
that all will be in love with night
and pay no worship to the garish sun. william shakespeare
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Re: That's just aweful

Postby The Supreme Canuck » Wed Dec 04, 2013 5:38 am

code monkey wrote:tsc, how do you define the terms 'awe' and 'religious feeling'?


Awe: That feeling which simultaneously makes you feel insignificant and expansive. Being overwhelmed by emotions at experiencing a sight/song/piece of literature/etc. Being moved to the extremes of human emotion by something magnificent/terrible/wonderful/etc.

Religious feeling: The emotion or state of mind that the awe, as described above, being felt is caused by god/the world spirit/Apollo/etc.

now you 2 play nicely.


Aw... we're jus' horsin' around, is all...

:lol:
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Re: That's just aweful

Postby geonuc » Wed Dec 04, 2013 11:03 am

This strikes me as no different than religious people proclaiming their religion. If one believes in god and that god has a hand in all that is, was and will be, then if something awesome occurs, it is the work of god. If an atheist experiences awe, they are therefore experiencing the work of god, even if they won't admit it.
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Re: That's just aweful

Postby FZR1KG » Wed Dec 04, 2013 3:28 pm

I know people who experience awe every time they look at themselves naked in a mirror.
I always thought that was being a delusional nutjob but apparently its divine. LOL
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Re: That's just aweful

Postby SciFiFisher » Wed Dec 04, 2013 9:39 pm

It would truly depend on whether you were talking about Awe or awe.

At least IMO Awe is a moment when you are struck with a profound sense of reverence by something. A moment when you realize that what is before you cannot possibly have been the result of the ordinary. In some cases this means you might attribute that result as being the work of a divine force (i.e. God). I experience Awe when I look up at the stars at night and realize that we are just a small pin prick in a universe so vast that even with the right technology we may never be able to explore more than just a fraction of it before the entropy of the universe winds down. In the sense that the word awe also used to mean terrifying you can add that too to my feeling of Awe. :shock:

awe is what you experience when you are confronted by the terrible/sublime/magnificent etc. for example, I experience awe when I see Vincent Van Gogh's Starry Night. I am in awe of that creativity and talent.
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Re: That's just aweful

Postby The Supreme Canuck » Wed Dec 04, 2013 10:06 pm

I make no distinction between the two, and find nothing religious or spiritual in either of them. Awe (which, again, is one concept) is merely a human emotion created in the brain when a person is exposed to certain stimuli. There is no hand of god in it any more than there is the hand of god in sadness, joy, or anger.
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Re: That's just aweful

Postby SciFiFisher » Thu Dec 05, 2013 1:50 am

FZR1KG wrote:I know people who experience awe every time they look at themselves naked in a mirror.
I always thought that was being a delusional nutjob but apparently its divine. LOL


In some cases the line between divinity and delusional is a very thin veil indeed. :P
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Re: That's just aweful

Postby SciFiFisher » Thu Dec 05, 2013 1:50 am

The Supreme Canuck wrote:I make no distinction between the two, and find nothing religious or spiritual in either of them. Awe (which, again, is one concept) is merely a human emotion created in the brain when a person is exposed to certain stimuli. There is no hand of god in it any more than there is the hand of god in sadness, joy, or anger.


and again with the anecdotal evidence. :P
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"Experience is a hard teacher because she gives the test first, the lesson afterward." — Vernon Law
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Re: That's just aweful

Postby The Supreme Canuck » Thu Dec 05, 2013 2:53 am

Once again: bite me.

;)
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Re: That's just aweful

Postby code monkey » Thu Dec 05, 2013 9:27 am

The Supreme Canuck wrote:
code monkey wrote:tsc, how do you define the terms 'awe' and 'religious feeling'?


Awe: That feeling which simultaneously makes you feel insignificant and expansive. Being overwhelmed by emotions at experiencing a sight/song/piece of literature/etc. Being moved to the extremes of human emotion by something magnificent/terrible/wonderful/etc.

Religious feeling: The emotion or state of mind that the awe, as described above, being felt is caused by god/the world spirit/Apollo/etc.


why is an entity required for religious feeling? are religious feelings only associated with awe? could they not be convictions about the proper way to live one's life and treat one's fellow beings?

and why do you want fisher to bite you? wouldn't that hurt?
and still i persist in wondering whether folly must always be our nemesis. edgar pangborn

come gentle night. come loving black browed night
give me my romeo. and when he shall die
take him and cut him out in little stars
and he will make the face of heaven so fine
that all will be in love with night
and pay no worship to the garish sun. william shakespeare
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Re: That's just aweful

Postby The Supreme Canuck » Thu Dec 05, 2013 8:02 pm

code monkey wrote:why is an entity required for religious feeling?


Because that defines "religion" for me. Not necessarily a deity, but rather a belief in something outside that which is empirically provable by scientific inquiry. That can be a belief in a god, belief in phlogiston theory, belief in Freudian psychology, etc. If you have no such supernatural entity, you don't have religious belief; if you don't have religious belief, you don't have religious feeling.

are religious feelings only associated with awe? could they not be convictions about the proper way to live one's life and treat one's fellow beings?


Religious feelings can be associated with any emotion or mental state. You just take that mental state and attribute it to your religious entity rather than your own brain.

Convictions about how to live life and treat others are no different. Religious or not, that's ethical philosophy. Whether you choose to attribute that to a religious entity or to secular thought is up to you, but it has no bearing on the fact that it's philosophy. Just as awe can be experienced by a religious person or a non-religious person, an ethical philosophy can be held by either as well.

Basically, what I'm saying is that human mental states (like the feeling of awe or adherence to an ethical philosophy) are universal. They're things that all human brains create. The error that religious people make, in my opinion, is linking these human-created human universals to some sort of supernatural influence. A non-religious person will experience awe and say "Boy. That's awe alright!" A religious person may experience awe and say "Boy. That's awe alright! It is the direct intervention of the Great Gargle-Flarble on my mental state. Praise be the ten supra-gods!"

There's no good reason to do that. It's the same as one person looking at a flood and saying "Yep. Natural disaster" and another looking at the same flood and saying "Yep. Wrath of god."

Of course, I fully expect many religious people to disagree with me.

and why do you want fisher to bite you? wouldn't that hurt?


Honestly? Good question. The English language is odd at times...
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