Beyond the Flock

Not all those who wander are lost: A mission

May 28, 2008 · 3 Comments

A good many people are convinced that they’re right. “John McCain has the wrong ideas for America;” “Blue goes with the sofa better than brown;” “Thou shalt have no other God but me.” I find it troublesome, however, that these assertions tend to evade careful evaluation. As Socrates said, “The unexamined life is not worth living.” As such, I intend to subject a variety of such claims to a reasoned an analysis as possible. Does John McCain have the wrong ideas for America? Why does blue go best with the sofa? Should we have no other god but God?

But first, and perhaps more important, is the question, “Why bother?”

Per my central premise, examination itself must be examined. The reason is clear. If the examination of ideas is shown to lack merit, both you, the reader, and I, the writer, can abandon this endeavor in favor of more worthwhile pursuits. I find this not to be the case. Examination of ideas, claims, etc. aids us in sorting out what we believe. What we believe in turn plays a rold in how we live our lives. Sam Harris, in The End of Faith, explains:

“A belief is a lever that, once pulled, moves almost everything else in a person’s life. Are you a scientist? A liberal? A racist? These are merely species of belief in action. Your beliefs define your vision of the world; they dictate your behavior; they determine your emotional responses to other human beings. If you doubt this, consider how your experience would suddenly change if you came to believe one of the following prepositions:

  1. You have only two weeks to live.
  2. You’ve just won a lottery prize of one hundred million dollars.
  3. Aliens have implanted a receiver in your skull and are manipulating your
    thoughts.

These are mere words–until you believe them. Once believed, they become part
of the very apparatus of your mind, determining your desires, fears,
expectations, and subsequent behavior” (12).

Examining our beliefs carefully is valuable, then, because our beliefs affect our lives. If we want our lives to be at least primarily founded in rationality, we should be sure that our beliefs are also, in general, rational. (Complete analysis of every belief is unnecessary; I will address this later.)

A few items worth mentioning:

  • Beyond the Flock is so named because many of the conclusions I will draw run contrary to what many people believe. Thus, the need to examine each conclusion carefully.
  • “I shall not go out of my way to offend, but nor shall I don kid gloves to handle religion any more gently than I would handle anything else,” says Richard Dawkins in The God Delusion. I share Dawkins’ view on handling not just religion, but all other subjects I will address as well.
  • Dissent is encouraged. Please voice your own opinion.
  • If you like what I’m doing here, tell people. If you hate what I’m doing here, tell me why.
  • Topic suggestions are welcome.

Thanks for reading. To be continued…

Categories: Philosophical stuff · Relevant rants
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3 responses so far ↓

  • Sciantel // February 4, 2009 at 1:46 am

    These are end times and all who think the cross is foolishness will perish. Us who are being saved by it it is the Power of the only God there is. I very much am against what you are doing. You best leave the topic of God out of this. What you are doing isn’t of God. Be warned…

  • Sciantel // February 4, 2009 at 1:47 am

    ( 1Corinthians 1:18 )
    Chose life, or death. The end is soon to come for you if you stay on this path of destruction.

  • Brendan // February 15, 2009 at 10:27 pm

    Would god not cherish the search for truth? Faith is worthless unless tested and challenged. Consider it a challenge to keep your faith in the onslaught of reason. And stop quoting that bloody bible thingy, it has so much assorted crap in it that it could be used to support almost ANY point of view. I doubt you have noticed the bible also tells you not to wear clothes made of both cotton and wool, not to eat pork, (which i expect you do), and not to condemn anyone for thier faith. (have you actually paid attention to what Jesus was saying? He tried to tell the world to live lives of peace and non-violence. most of all he said he did not want to be worshiped but to worship his father, and yet there is a hideously large cult ran by multiple large bureaucracy that worship him while selectively ignoring what he said to do.

    Wield reason against foolishness, and when that fails use a large stick.

    And more then anything else, “Keep Thy Religion to Thy Self!”

    … I think that was my first flame… sadly the victim will likely never read it.

    *googles* hmm, hope the Lupis gets better Sciantel. Keep, your faith close to your heart. You will likely die happier then we live.

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