Quoting your college classes is the first sign of inexperience but I’ll
Share some modern concepts.
In Adam Curtis‘s all watched over by machines of loving Grace, he makes a pretty long and complete argument that humanity has a rich history of turning over its decision-making to inanimate objects in a desire to discover ideologies we can’t form ourselves in growing complexity of our interconnectivity.
He tells a history of them constantly failing because the core ideology of “cybernetics” is underlying them all and fails to be adaptive enough to match our DNA/Body/mind combined cognitive system. Especially when scaled to large groups.
He makes the second point that humanity and many thinkers constantly also resort to the false notion of “naturalism” as the ideal state of humanity, when in reality there is no natural state of anything, except maybe complexity and chaos.
Giving yourself up to something. Specially something that doesn’t work is very much “believing in a false god.”
You seem to be lost. While referencing a TV show may or may not be a rebuttal to a very specific kind of worldview, it is out of place as a response to my post to which you've failed to actually directly reference at all.
I'm addressing this point at you personally because we can all see your comments: being nasty to atheists on the internet will never be a substitute for hard evidence for your ideology.
you seem to be profoundly confused Adam Curtis is a leading thinker in documentarian of our time and widely recognized in continental philosophy. The fact that you tried to dismiss him as a TV show shows you seem to be completely naïve about the topic you’re speaking about.
Second, I’m not being nasty to atheists and speaking specifically about not having false gods which if anything is a somewhat atheistic perspective
Like I said, we can all read your comments. Needs no further elaboration. If I receive a second recommendation for Curtis then I might be inclined to check it out. Take it easy.
In Adam Curtis‘s all watched over by machines of loving Grace, he makes a pretty long and complete argument that humanity has a rich history of turning over its decision-making to inanimate objects in a desire to discover ideologies we can’t form ourselves in growing complexity of our interconnectivity.
He tells a history of them constantly failing because the core ideology of “cybernetics” is underlying them all and fails to be adaptive enough to match our DNA/Body/mind combined cognitive system. Especially when scaled to large groups.
He makes the second point that humanity and many thinkers constantly also resort to the false notion of “naturalism” as the ideal state of humanity, when in reality there is no natural state of anything, except maybe complexity and chaos.
Giving yourself up to something. Specially something that doesn’t work is very much “believing in a false god.”