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Theme Changer

 Topic: Your philosophical stance?

 (Read 13487 times)
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  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #30 - March 20, 2010, 09:09 AM

    This is the most difficult question one can be asked.
    The honest answer is I don't know, I don't know if I'll ever know what the truth is and then be able to go on and adopt it as a label.

    The only thing I can say, and this will just restate the question, that I am a lover of wisdom.

    At evening, casual flocks of pigeons make
    Ambiguous undulations as they sink,
    Downward to darkness, on extended wings. - Stevens
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #31 - March 20, 2010, 11:25 AM

    I could, but wouldnt know if it was reliable..

    Have you tried The Political Compass
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #32 - March 20, 2010, 11:29 AM

    Yes, ferrero, but is politics the be all and end all of a way of life?

    At evening, casual flocks of pigeons make
    Ambiguous undulations as they sink,
    Downward to darkness, on extended wings. - Stevens
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #33 - March 20, 2010, 11:41 AM

    theocratic ultra militaristic national socialist
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #34 - March 20, 2010, 12:03 PM

    Have you tried The Political Compass

    Yes, its very good, similar to the MyerBriggs test for personality type.

    (As a utilitarianist Cheesy) they are the kind of things I am looking for, but with a philosophical bent as opposed to a political/personality one.

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  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #35 - March 20, 2010, 12:10 PM

    This is the most difficult question one can be asked.
    The honest answer is I don't know, I don't know if I'll ever know what the truth is and then be able to go on and adopt it as a label.

    Is that is in itself a philosophical stance?  Nihilism perhaps?

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  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #36 - March 20, 2010, 12:17 PM

    No, I don't think it is nihilism, I am not making the ontological point that there is no final truth, rather I am making the epistemic point that I don't know if I will be able to recognise the truth.

    The problem is one of certainty. Every philosophical system when generalised and stretched enough breaks down into paradox and contradiction, there is no complete system of rational thought that can encompass everything. Does that mean one should accept the world as inherently paradoxical? Perhaps that would be a philosophical stance, but one can ask the same question of this: how do we know that paradoxes encompass all of reality, perhaps there is an ultimate theory that can resolve all paradoxes but one cannot gain access to it? So, we have come full circle and we are still uncertain.

    Certainty is a shy muse!

    At evening, casual flocks of pigeons make
    Ambiguous undulations as they sink,
    Downward to darkness, on extended wings. - Stevens
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #37 - March 20, 2010, 12:44 PM

    I agree, however some might find one philosophical stance that they relate to more than others.  Perhaps all of these terms are meaningless and contradictory, and begs the question, what is the point of phliosophy?

    I believe your actual stance is as a true philosopher, and as its an infinite exploration none can ever apply.

    In finding which one somebody can be relate to more than others, you can convey a message in one word than a 100 words might not.  In doing so you might find certain members have a match, and if this is anything to go by, you may find that these groups might agree on more things here than others.  

    You are certainly right in that we all are a composite of all of these types, there are some aspects of Nazism that I can relate to and appreciate.  But I certainly dont in a broader sense, but Nima might.  

    Judging by your the posts here it would be interesting to see if say Kenan & Panoptic or you & Omar Khayyam, might be similar.  Perhaps this exercise is silly and the thread might go someway to show or debunk this.

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  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #38 - March 20, 2010, 12:52 PM

    After a reading this list I have updated my closest matching philosophical stance as a libertarian-hedonistic-utilitarian-reductionist humanist.  But I dont think its a good way of introducing myself at parties  Smiley but nonetheless would be useful if somebody knows nothing about me, and wants to know as much as possible with just 5 words (thats the reductionist in me talking). 


    Anyhow this is an interesting list from wiki, for those who are not sure of the choices available

    I dont know what most of them mean, would be great to find a book that defined all of these separate entities in a concise format. 

    Trust Pakistan to be the only country in the world with its own separate philosophy titled Pakistani philosophy here.  I looked it up on wiki, and its pretty much the general attitude over there.

    And vote goes to Rastafari for the coolest category which no-one has espoused to yet, but I would have done in my late teens

    Quote
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_philosophies

    A

    Absolutism - Absurdism - Actual Idealism - Advaita Vedanta - Aesthetics - African philosophy - Agnosticism - Altruism - American philosophy - Anti-realism - Analytic philosophy - Anarchism - Ancient philosophy - Anomalous monism - Applied ethics - Aristotelianism - Atheism - Averroism - Avicennism - Axiology

    B
    Bioethics - Biosophy - Buddhist philosophy

    C
    Charvaka - Chinese philosophy - Christian existentialism - Christian humanism - Christian philosophy - Classical liberalism - Collectivism - Compatibilism and incompatibilism - Computer ethics - Confirmation holism - Confucianism - Consequentialism - Continental philosophy - Critical rationalism - Cultural relativism - Cynicism - Czech philosophy

    D
    Daoism- Danish philosophy - Deconstruction - Deductive reasoning - Deism - Defeatism - Democratic transhumanism - Deontology - Determinism - Dialectical materialism - Digital philosophy - Discordianism - Dualism - Dvaita

    E
    Ethical Egoism

    F
    Freemasonry

    G
    German idealism - German philosophy - Greek philosophy

    H
    Hedonism - Hermeneutics - Heterophenomenology - Hindu philosophy - Historical materialism - Holism - Humanism - Humanistic naturalism - Hasidism

    I
    Idealism - Identityism - Illumination school - Individualism - Indian logic - Indian philosophy - Indonesian philosophy - Induction / Inductionism - Informal logic - Innatism - Instrumentalism - Internalism - Intraphilism - Intuitionism - Irrealism - Islamic ethics - Islamic philosophy

    J
    Jainism - Japanese philosophy - Jewish philosophy - Juche - Judeo-Islamic philosophies (800 - 1400) - Just war theory

    K
    Kantianism - Kashmir Shaivism - Korean philosophy

    L
    Legalism - Libertarianism (metaphysics) - Libertarianism - Logic / Informal logic - Logical atomism - Logical positivism - Logicism - Logic in China - Logic in Islamic philosophy

    M
    Marxism - Materialism - Mathematical logic - Medical ethics - Medieval philosophy - Mereological nihilism - Meta-philosophy - Metaphysics - Metaethics - Modernism - Modern Islamic philosophy - Monism - Moral absolutism - Moral objectivism - Moral realism - Moral relativism - Moral skepticism

    N
    Naturalism - Neo-Confucianism - Neo-Hegelianism - Neo-Kantianism - Neoplatonism - Neo-Scholasticism - Neuroethics - Neurophilosophy - Neurotheology - New realism - New Wittgenstein - Neutral monism - Nihilism - Nominalism - Nondualism

    O
    Objective idealism - Objectivism (Ayn Rand) - Ontology - Optimism

    P
    Pacifism - Paganism - Pakistani philosophy - Pancritical rationalism - Pandeism - Panentheism - Panpsychism - Pantheism - Perennial philosophy - Perfectionism - Peripatetic - Personalism - Perspectivism - Pessimism - Phenomenalism - Phenomenology - Philosophical Satanism - Physicalism - Platonic realism - Platonism - Pluralism - Political philosophy - Positivism - Postanalytic philosophy - Post-structuralism - Posthumanism - Post-modernism - Pragmatism - Praxis school - Presentism - Process philosophy - Property dualism - Pseudophilosophy - Psychological Egoism - Pyrrhonian skepticism - Pythagoreanism

    Q
    R
    Rastafari - Rationalism - Realism - Reconstructivism - Reductionism - Reductive materialism - Reformational philosophy - Relativism - Religious humanism - Reliabilism - Renaissance humanism - Romanian philosophy - Romanticism - Russian philosophy

    S
    Scholasticism - Secular humanism - Semantic holism - Singularitarianism - Skepticism - Social philosophy - Solipsism - Sophism - Stoicism - Structuralism - Subjective idealism - Subjectivism - Sufi metaphysics- Supervenience - Surrealism- Synoptic philosophy

    T
    Taoism - Teleology - Tetralemma - Theism - Thelema - Theology - Theosophy - Traditionalist School - Transcendent Theosophy (al-Hikmat al-Muta’liyah) - Transcendentalism - Transcendental Perspectivism - Transhumanism - Type physicalism

    U
    Utilitarian Bioethics - Utilitarianism

    V
    Value-pluralism - Value theory - Verificationism - Virtue ethics - Vishishtadvaita - Vitalism - Voluntarism

    W
    Wahdat-ul-Wujood - Wahdat-ul-Shuhud - Western philosophy

    Y
    Yekishim

    Z
    Zen Buddhism


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  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #39 - March 20, 2010, 01:02 PM

    No, I don't think it is nihilism, I am not making the ontological point that there is no final truth, rather I am making the epistemic point that I don't know if I will be able to recognise the truth.

    The problem is one of certainty. Every philosophical system when generalised and stretched enough breaks down into paradox and contradiction, there is no complete system of rational thought that can encompass everything. Does that mean one should accept the world as inherently paradoxical? Perhaps that would be a philosophical stance, but one can ask the same question of this: how do we know that paradoxes encompass all of reality, perhaps there is an ultimate theory that can resolve all paradoxes but one cannot gain access to it? So, we have come full circle and we are still uncertain.

    Or let me put it another way, do you find yourself agreeing with some posters here more than others?  If so, why is that?

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  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #40 - March 20, 2010, 01:04 PM

    How about Possibilianism? Smiley

    German ex-Muslim forumMy YouTubeList of Ex-Muslims
    Wikis: en de fr ar tr
    CEMB-Chat
    I'm on an indefinite break...
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #41 - March 20, 2010, 10:57 PM

    I agree, however some might find one philosophical stance that they relate to more than others.  Perhaps all of these terms are meaningless and contradictory, and begs the question, what is the point of phliosophy?

    I believe your actual stance is as a true philosopher, and as its an infinite exploration none can ever apply.

    In finding which one somebody can be relate to more than others, you can convey a message in one word than a 100 words might not.  In doing so you might find certain members have a match, and if this is anything to go by, you may find that these groups might agree on more things here than others.  

    You are certainly right in that we all are a composite of all of these types, there are some aspects of Nazism that I can relate to and appreciate.  But I certainly dont in a broader sense, but Nima might.  

    Judging by your the posts here it would be interesting to see if say Kenan & Panoptic or you & Omar Khayyam, might be similar.  Perhaps this exercise is silly and the thread might go someway to show or debunk this.


    Well, I do not think philosophy is pointless, there are plenty of views I can somewhat agree with. The problem is that every position taken can be argued against and so no system of thought (that I have come across) can be taken as a certainty.
    Perhaps all one can say is agree with Socrates: "All I know is that I know nothing."

    I hope you see that I'm not trying to avoid the question, there are a few theories that I feel can be precursors to the truth, eg: in terms of morality I favour pacifism, in metaphysics I favour a process or organic philosophy, in ontology I find pantheism to be very appealing and in epistemology I think perhaps Plato had it right with his theory of the ultimate good (or wisdom) being the only realm of knowledge and thus opening a door to some sort of idealist/ subjectivist mysticism.
    Can I say that these theories reflect my own philosophical stance on everything? Perhaps for now, but I see the difficulties in all the positions and I understand that my own views can change so it becomes difficult to pick a position and stake my claim to it.


    At evening, casual flocks of pigeons make
    Ambiguous undulations as they sink,
    Downward to darkness, on extended wings. - Stevens
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #42 - March 20, 2010, 11:45 PM

    I'd be interested to know if you find yourself agreeing with some posters here more than others, and if so, why?

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  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #43 - March 21, 2010, 03:48 AM

    Liberalism, progressivism, problem-solvingism, do-goodism and feel-goodism*.


    @Q-Man, couldn't agree more.

    @deusvult, as a minarchist, would you consider the privatization of the judiciary?


    *Obviously I was joking. I am an authoritarian paleoconservative ethno-nationalist  Smiley
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #44 - March 21, 2010, 03:49 AM

    Liberalism, progressivism, problem-solvingism, do-goodism and feel-goodism*.


     Smiley

    Quote
    *Obviously I was joking. I am an authoritarian paleoconservative ethno-nationalist  Smiley


     Cry

    Iblis has mad debaterin' skillz. Best not step up unless you're prepared to recieve da pain.

  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #45 - March 23, 2010, 04:17 AM

    I'd be interested to know if you find yourself agreeing with some posters here more than others, and if so, why?


    I suppose I have found myself agreeing with bella, allat and charles on their pantheistic views. I've also found much to agree with panoptic regarding anarchy.
    In general, I have found that sensible, rational and polite posters like omaar khayyam and hassan are very agreeable to my method of inquiry and discourse. I always prefer friendly discussion to aggressive debate.

    At evening, casual flocks of pigeons make
    Ambiguous undulations as they sink,
    Downward to darkness, on extended wings. - Stevens
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #46 - March 23, 2010, 10:28 AM

    I suppose I have found myself agreeing with bella, allat and charles on their pantheistic views. I've also found much to agree with panoptic regarding anarchy.
    In general, I have found that sensible, rational and polite posters like omaar khayyam and hassan are very agreeable to my method of inquiry and discourse. I always prefer friendly discussion to aggressive debate.

    I never quite seen it like this, and segmented by debating tactics - but yes, I can see that.  FFI type posters like CharlesMartel & SNB are very different to the way others here post.

    I can see virtue & problems with both approaches.  One might alienate, the other might take a lot of time and lose direction.  One might be seen as preaching & teaching, and the other might be seen as a quest for mutual enquiry.

    Anyhow coming back to the original question.  If we find we can relate to some posters here more than others, it would be interesting to see if thats because of a possible link in our philosophical worldview.

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  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #47 - March 23, 2010, 10:55 AM

    Quote
    I never quite seen it like this, and segmented by debating tactics - but yes, I can see that. FFI type posters like CharlesMartel & SNB are very different to the way others here post.

    Why are they different dear IsLame?  You know you were a FFI poster., you still post., and I am a FFI poster., I would say I was(may be am) one of the active poster of FFI., So we are all different., So what?

    Should we Not? I think to make it popular,  Diverse opinion must be encouraged on a board like this. 

    In fact one of my problem with CEMB is, it is NOT diverse.  Any Muslim guy comes here, he will be smothered to death by suffocating him/her with every possible insults, Yet many here are were More Muslims than the many of the posters  of FFI. And it is same for other fellows who may use the religious preachings in their life. If you don't interact you can not educate people..

    Sorry if I dropped some cold water on this FFI/CEMB   cat fight..

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #48 - March 23, 2010, 11:01 AM

    Why are they different dear IsLame?  You know you were a FFI poster., you still post., and I am a FFI poster., I would say I was(may be am) one of the active poster of FFI., So we are all different., So what?

    Should we Not? I think to make it popular,  Diverse opinion must be encouraged on a board like this. 

    In fact one of my problem with CEMB is, it is NOT diverse.  Any Muslim guy comes here, he will be smothered to death by suffocating him/her with every possible insults, Yet many here are were More Muslims than the many of the posters  of FFI. And it is same for other fellows who may use the religious preachings in their life. If you don't interact you can not educate people..

    Sorry if I dropped some cold water on this FFI/CEMB   cat fight..

    I only use FFI for notification purposes, I never post on there and get involved in debates.

    I agree with the rest of your point, but think you are talking about something in parallel, like you always do.

    I was talking about the difference in FFI culture, and if you cant see that, then get another pair of glasses.

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  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #49 - March 23, 2010, 11:09 AM

    Any Muslim guy comes here, he will be smothered to death by suffocating him/her with every possible insults...


    I don't think that's true at all, Yeezevee. We don't smother to death and insult Muslim posters who come here.
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #50 - March 23, 2010, 11:16 AM

    Pyrrhonian skepticism (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyrrhonism)

    Do not look directly at the operational end of the device.
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #51 - March 23, 2010, 11:22 AM

    I don't think that's true at all, Yeezevee. We don't smother to death and insult Muslim posters who come here.

    I think it kinda happened in this thread, though:

    http://www.councilofexmuslims.com/index.php?topic=9262.0

    You invited him to join, but people were making fun of him even before he joined.
    Then no wonder he would not come here :\

    Do not look directly at the operational end of the device.
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #52 - March 23, 2010, 11:55 AM

    Quote
    I don't think that's true at all, Yeezevee. We don't smother to death and insult Muslim posters who come here.

    I hope I am wrong and I wish I am wrong dear Hassan but I see/read no one defending Islam with Scriptures the way Muslim folks do at FFI.  

    Let me ask you a question dear Hassan, Do you consider AhmedBhagat a Muslim guy? It is true all guys here are not that way., But Muslims are more sensitive than others to heckling and indirect kicks..

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #53 - March 23, 2010, 12:03 PM

    IsLame
    Quote
    I only use FFI for notification purposes, I never post on there and get involved in debates.

    I agree with the rest of your point, but think you are talking about something in parallel, like you always do.

    I was talking about the difference in FFI culture, and if you cant see that, then get another pair of glasses.

    you may have a point there as I have not read all the thread except your post for some reason went in to FFI., But you have to realize that some of the CEMB members(not all) consider as if it is Haram to actively participate in ffi and write here as if they wish FFI gets closed down and all its members join CEMB dear IsLame., In fact you being an Ex-Muslim your words above says to me that you consider FFI as an untouchable.. just go there to notify something..  

    Sorry some times I am a hard nut.  Yes you are right I need not just one pair of glasses but in  need of different colors and different depths in the glass..


     

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #54 - March 23, 2010, 05:30 PM

    I think it kinda happened in this thread, though:

    http://www.councilofexmuslims.com/index.php?topic=9262.0

    You invited him to join, but people were making fun of him even before he joined.
    Then no wonder he would not come here :\


    Oh, OK, perhaps, though I still wouldn't say we pour hate on Muslims here. Most here were indeed in the same position that they were in so we can truly empathise. In fact we get blamed for being too soft by some ppl who accuse us of not allowing Muslims to be crriticised Wink  At the end of the day it is a discussion forum and Muslims have to be prepared for a bit of argy bargy. I think some Muslims can be a bit too sensitive - and frankly don't like the thought of debating with ex-Muslims.
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #55 - March 23, 2010, 05:33 PM

    Yeah, I've had a lot of discussion with anarcho-cappies. They tend to be sharp and make good points, but none of them have ever convinced me that getting rid of the state solves the problem of defending liberty against abuse of power, or that a institution similar to the state in function wouldn't just reappear with a different structure and name.


    It does resolve the abuse of liberty by the state though.  This part I am much more amicable towards.  If states didn't have the ability to take resources from the population without consent and use it to further its own interests or interests of a select few the liberty would be greatly enhanced.  The reasoning behind the negation of a non state action creating a " state"  by force by using defense companies seems pretty weak to me, and I haven't been convinced of the practicality as much as I have been convinced of the theory of lowering barriers for labor to move in and out of a state would have a beneficial effect for all involved.  It would keep State excesses in check because people would simply move out and allow a State that has it's act in order to gain more citizens or base to further more efficient, equitable methods of governance.  I lean more this way, though not completely convinced that a complete release of "state sovereignty" would be beneficial.  

    Quote
    The mistake I think Rothbard and his followers made is conflating the state with aggregation of power to the detriment of individual liberty. I think the latter is completely feasible without the former, and, in certain circumstances is actually more likely to be problematic without the democratic republican state acting as (an albeit not entirely impartial) mediator between parties and making an attempt, no matter how half-assed it may be, to protect the rights of those with no power or wealth, and to have some accountability to the people as a whole.


    I think while feasible, historically it hasn't been entirely without it's problems.  Limiting the power of the government substantially usually helps.  ACists  deontologicalists usually say that all state power is inherently bad unless given voluntary approval.  Consequentialists believe that limited state power could be beneficial in certain areas.  I tend toward this area.

    Quote
    The other thing I have a big problem wrapping my head around is why ACs seem to think it is possible to have large disparities of wealth without corresponding large disparities of power, and abuse of that power (to the detriment of the rights and liberties of other people), considering the fact that these two things have always gone hand-in-hand since the beginning of civilization. Control more resources, and you have more power-- way it's always been, and likely the way it always will be.


    Meh.  They make a good point that wealth gained though "good" ends such as being an entrepreneur and providing goods and services to other people isn't bad all.  I would be loathed to say that the guy that invents the cure for cancer and makes a million dollars in the process is bad.  Likewise to forceably remove "honestly" earned wealth from someone to give to another is form of an "abuse of power" as well, and would create a state that would have the exact characteristics that have historically abused liberty.  But to use strictly deontological arguments ignores the very real fact that people do feel cheated when others have more or that people with more wealth are able to skirt or bend the rules far easier than poorer people.  

    Quote
    Finally, the idea of a completely organically self-regulating economy, with no external controls, manipulation or interference, whether that be a Marxian communist society or a purely free-market capitalist society, I find to be utopian and unrealistic.



    This is actually the strongest argument for them, mostly because it doesn't come from Anarcho Capitalists but from Austrian Economics which is a legitimate school of economics independent of ACism, but welded together by Rothbard.  Austrian economics does work with miniarchism and statism, it simply expounds on the effects of interferences in the market.     I label myself as of the Austrian school of economics but not in the AC political theory mindset.  

    So once again I'm left with the classic Irish man's dilemma, do I eat the potato or do I let it ferment so I can drink it later?
    My political philosophy below
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwGat4i8pJI&feature=g-vrec
    Just kidding, here are some true heros
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dBTgvK6LQqA
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #56 - March 23, 2010, 05:40 PM



    @deusvult, as a minarchist, would you consider the privatization of the judiciary?


    I'm still flipping a coin on this one.  I haven't thought it out completely.  I do benefits in a "market" of judiciary systems though. 

    So once again I'm left with the classic Irish man's dilemma, do I eat the potato or do I let it ferment so I can drink it later?
    My political philosophy below
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwGat4i8pJI&feature=g-vrec
    Just kidding, here are some true heros
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dBTgvK6LQqA
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #57 - March 23, 2010, 05:45 PM

    I hope I am wrong and I wish I am wrong dear Hassan but I see/read no one defending Islam with Scriptures the way Muslim folks do at FFI.

    Let me ask you a question dear Hassan, Do you consider AhmedBhagat a Muslim guy? It is true all guys here are not that way., But Muslims are more sensitive than others to heckling and indirect kicks..


    Actually we've had quite a few and in my experience here and on FFI in the past - I don't think there is a huge difference. Muslims come and go. It also has to be said that FFI has been around a lot longer and is more widely known about, than CEMB is.

    I also think some Muslims may have less of a problem debating on FFI because they are - if truth be told - mostly debating people who have never been Muslim and that is more comfortable for them than debating Ex-Muslims - who make them far more uncomfortable because they can't dismiss us as bigots or haters - nor can they claim we are 'ignorant of Islam' etc...

    One more important point is that CEMB is not all about debating Muslims - it is here primarily for Ex-Muslims - to provide a place for us to share and support one another and help ex-Muslims to know they are not alone and isolated as many feel they are in the situations they live in.

    If Ahmad Baghat says he is a Muslim then he is - though clearly he follows his own brand of Islam.

    However I totally agree with you that Muslims are very sensitive - but I really think the atmosphere is not full of hate and anger against Muslims - not at all - and I certainly would not want to be part of any sort of  bash Muslims for the sake of bashing them. I am totally against that.

    In fact I'm quite astonished you say we pour hatred on Muslims.

    Does anyone else think we do that?
  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #58 - March 23, 2010, 05:57 PM

    But Hassan, wouldn't you say Muslims are overly-sensitive and easily offended even when you're trying to be polite? Simply saying the Quran was written by man can be an explosive comment even among the most liberal minded muslims. That's been my experience. Making a purely factual statements can be treated as declarations of war by muslims - even when you were trying to be polite!

    Iblis has mad debaterin' skillz. Best not step up unless you're prepared to recieve da pain.

  • Re: Your philosophical stance?
     Reply #59 - March 23, 2010, 06:02 PM

    But Hassan, wouldn't you say Muslims are overly-sensitive and easily offended even when you're trying to be polite? Simply saying the Quran was written by man can be an explosive comment even among the most liberal minded muslims. That's been my experience. Making a purely factual statements can be treated as declarations of war by muslims - even when you were trying to be polite!


    Oh yes definitely, Iblis (in fact I said so above) - but that is their problem - not ours. My point is that from our side - we are not being hateful. How others perceive what we say is not our problem. Our only responsibility is to make sure we don't start hating on Muslims - which I don't believe we do. Which is why Yeezevee's statement astonished me.
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