Is it possible to be a follower of Ayn Rand and not be an atheist?
Posted by Mamaemma 10 years, 6 months ago to Philosophy
I think it is.
You type: | You see: |
---|---|
*italics* | italics |
**bold** | bold |
While we're very happy to have you in the Gulch and appreciate your wanting to fully engage, some things in the Gulch (e.g. voting, links in comments) are a privilege, not a right. To get you up to speed as quickly as possible, we've provided two options for earning these privileges.
Previous comments... You are currently on page 7.
I was born evangelical, gave that up at age 18, and by age 24 I had read Atlas Shrugged 3 times and bought several others by Ayn Rand. At that time I revelled in Rand's attacks on mysticism and decided I was an aethist; all that was long ago about 1964. My view has somewhat tempered these days so I consider myself agnostic -- "don't know, can't know, so why bother?"
That said, even to this day I see Blind Faith as a lazy and unreasoned way to run the railroad. I view still that Ayn Rand was right about mysticism.
I could not help but look on with scoffing amusement when ancient Spartans repeatedly shouted that in the 300 flick.
300 is historically inaccurate on several levels but still comic book fantasy OK for entertaining..
The sequel is just plain baa-aaad!"
2. yes people are "organic." Death is a reality. There is no empirical evidence for reincarnation
3. 70% of the population believe in reincarnation. cite and how is that objective proof of anything?
4."the Judeo-Christian God is rather simplistic"> a complicated god is more valid?
5. all over the map here.> this is an Objectivist site.
What you're sounding like is someone trying to define 'infinity.' Infinity by definition has no measure. You are simply refusing to accept definitions, which leads to gobbledygook. Without 'A=A', we can have no communication.
And my answer would be “No.”
I believe the Mud expression is used, by those who have religious believes, to describe those who don’t.
As to the concept of God; one could believe in man as a spiritual being and still not believe in an omnipotent god above them. Does Buddhism, for example, believe in a Supreme Being?
There are many varieties of beliefs that acknowledge existence beyond the organic person of this immediate live. Over 70% of the world’s population believe in reincarnation. Compared to many belief systems, the Judeo-Christian god is rather simplistic. Perhaps that is why we here are all over the map on this.
Atheists make only two basic mistakes: 1. They confuse God and religion (God is a mind...not a man-made product) and 2. They confuse the product of this mind with the product derived from the product of a mind (the creative process of eventually making beings like yourself over a period of time that only a timeless being can think through).
Other than that, Ayn Rand has it right. It would shock me if she wasn't at the right hand of Jesus.
Atheism is not a philosophy. It does not recognize anything. It rejects the concept of God. I am unfamiliar with the phrase about mud. Sounds like something someone who is religious would say
This is the crucial point of "existence exists".......what AR termed "out there"...........it is not "how" it is but "that" it is.........and life requires that it (existence) be dealt with accurately to sustain life (if one so desires)........the next step is epistemology.........
Load more comments...