Nate (post: 1431195) wrote:Actually, it isn't meaningless. To most atheists, the meaning is clear. To live life to the fullest, because this is the only life you get. In fact, as I said before, I would argue that life is more meaningless to the Christian. What does it matter what we do in this life? We are saved by grace, not by works. If a mass murderer repented before he was executed, he would go to Heaven, would he not? Thus, his life of murder and evil was meaningless, for he has gone to the glory of God.
"Live life to the fullest." Still, I ask you, "Why?" This life being the only one you get does nothing to fundamentally make that life worth anything. In a vast universe of cold, uncaring chance, we are the fluke, the statistical improbability, the odd one out. Our concern with our own survival is merely sating our arrogance]In fact, our life on earth, for us Christians, is about as meaningless as you can get, for it is finite. The afterlife, however, is eternal. That is what truly matters. However, to atheists, who do not believe in an afterlife, this life is everything. It has immense meaning because it is all that exists.[/QUOTE]I balk at the suggestion that this life is meaningless to the Christian. It is this life into which we are born, in which we grow, physically, mentally, spiritually. It is this life which nurtures who we are and we choose to be. Accountability and personal choice, which Christianity holds so close, so crucial, can only be realized in a world such as this. Calling this world meaningless simply because there is another one cheapens the importance of transition. Who among us walked without first crawling?
Nate (post: 1431195) wrote:Self-preservation may not seem like a very glorious meaning to you, but that's a matter of opinion. Animals seem to get along just fine with just self-preservation and don't think about how meaningless or useless their existence is. My cats don't sit around going "Wait, what's the PURPOSE to my existing? Why do I live? Is there anything after this? If this life is all there is, I have no point in living!" They eat food, drink water, get petted, and nap in the sun. They don't need anything else. And they have self-preservation instincts, at least, they move out of the way when I start my car so they don't get run over (and they don't even have a concept of what death is).
This raises the peculiarity as to why humans are aware of our condition when other animals are not - as under atheism man is just another animal, fortunate in his heightened, adaptable intelligence. Furthermore, from where does the drive to exist come from? What is the origin point of the desire to remain alive in a random system? I ask these questions both seriously and rhetorically.
Regardless, it's a moot subject. As I've stated already, however glorious or inglorious you think mere survival is on any level, instinctual or acknowledged, that still doesn't instill it with any value in purposeless universe. You have to remove your ego from the equation to think about these things.
Nate (post: 1431195) wrote:So while it's nice to say "Life is meaningless without God or religion" it just doesn't seem to be that strong of an argument to me. Animals don't believe in God, and they do just fine. And while you could argue then that "Well then I can do anything I want, everything is permissible!" you run into a couple of problems. Namely one, you wouldn't want someone to kill or harm you just because they wanted to, so you should extend that respect to others, and two, getting caught by law enforcement and shortening your life by being executed or spending it rotting in a cell is hardly the best use of your time if you think this life is all there is.
Your thinking is still too ego-centric on this Nate. You say we should extend that respect to others.
Why?
So that they'll extend that respect to you.
Why?
Because it is good that we are alive and should endeavor to remain so.
Why is it good that we are alive? Why should we endeavor to remain alive? What is good? Good for you? Good for humanity? Good for the universe?
Good for yourself and for humanity, but neither good nor bad for the universe.
Why is it good for yourself and for humanity? What is good and bad?
Good are things that help yourself and humanity. Bad are things that hurt yourself and humanity.
Why is it bad to hurt yourself and humanity?
Because we might die.
Why is dying bad?
Because if we all die, there won't be any more humans.
Why does that matter?
It doesn't.
So why bother?
Good question.
CrimsonRyu17 (post: 1431212) wrote:I suppose brushing your teeth is meaningless because eventually they'll just rot, giving a starving person food is meaningless because he'll just get hungry again later, saving someone's life is meaningless because they'll eventually die.
In a universe without purpose, yes. Your every action or inaction is utterly trivial and devoid of substance beyond your own self-acknowledgment that you do what you want to do because you want to do it, or don't do whatever you don't want to do because you don't want to do it.