Difference between revisions of "Talk:Flying Spaghetti Monster"

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::I think it's more [[liberal hypocrisy]] than [[liberal deceit]]. - [[User:Borofkin2|Borofkin2]] 21:53, 31 October 2007 (EDT)
 
::I think it's more [[liberal hypocrisy]] than [[liberal deceit]]. - [[User:Borofkin2|Borofkin2]] 21:53, 31 October 2007 (EDT)
 
::On a related note, may I ask why my edit removing the words "thinly veiled attempt" was reverted? I feel that the statement as it stands now implies that Pastafarians are hoping to deceive somebody about their intentions. They're not. To say that it is a "thinly veiled attempt" at mockery is like saying that calling someone a "dumb stupid-face" is a "thinly veiled attempt" at insult. The phrase is unnecessary and inaccurate. [[User:Rstaylor|Rstayor]] 14:52, 9 November 2007 (EDT)
 
::On a related note, may I ask why my edit removing the words "thinly veiled attempt" was reverted? I feel that the statement as it stands now implies that Pastafarians are hoping to deceive somebody about their intentions. They're not. To say that it is a "thinly veiled attempt" at mockery is like saying that calling someone a "dumb stupid-face" is a "thinly veiled attempt" at insult. The phrase is unnecessary and inaccurate. [[User:Rstaylor|Rstayor]] 14:52, 9 November 2007 (EDT)
 
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:::This doesn't strike me as a mockery of the Christian religion, more of a counter-point to Intelligent Design. Teach the controversy, teach ID, evolution, and Pastafarianism! [[User:Barikada|Barikada]] 19:26, 16 January 2008 (EST)
 
== I didn't know straw man arguments were encyclopedic ==
 
== I didn't know straw man arguments were encyclopedic ==
  
 
Seriously, why is this even here? That Dawkins uses it and that there's a book about it hardly makes it notable. Dawkins is not the atheist god (though they treat him that way, ironically enough) and his word is not truth, and any idget can get a book published by some no-name company and sold on Amazon.com (e.g. William Rivers Pitt). That being said, I could see this being briefly mentioned in the [[Intelligent Design]] article in a list of the many straw man arguments atheists/evolutionists use against ID, but it really doesn't deserve its own article. [[User:Jinxmchue|Jinxmchue]] 10:30, 5 December 2007 (EST)
 
Seriously, why is this even here? That Dawkins uses it and that there's a book about it hardly makes it notable. Dawkins is not the atheist god (though they treat him that way, ironically enough) and his word is not truth, and any idget can get a book published by some no-name company and sold on Amazon.com (e.g. William Rivers Pitt). That being said, I could see this being briefly mentioned in the [[Intelligent Design]] article in a list of the many straw man arguments atheists/evolutionists use against ID, but it really doesn't deserve its own article. [[User:Jinxmchue|Jinxmchue]] 10:30, 5 December 2007 (EST)
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:We've got an article on [[dazzle painting]] but not one on [[camouflage]], I doubt notability is a big concern. Aside from that, it's here because it's useful for debates. [[User:Barikada|Barikada]] 19:26, 16 January 2008 (EST)

Revision as of 00:26, January 17, 2008

Somebody screwed up the references.

Mockery and Pastafarianism?

The Discovery Institute has argued that the FSM is an attempt to mock "traditional religion."[3] Indeed, self-professed believers in the Flying Spaghetti Monster have called themselves "Pastafarians".

I don't quite get the connection between those two sentences. How does them calling themselves "Pastafarians" argue for or against FSM mocking traditional religion? I get that the entire thing is (intelligently) designed to mock a whole bunch of stuff, but those two sentences made me go "Huh?" in the current form. --Sid 3050 11:58, 9 April 2007 (EDT)

It's not the designation of themselves as Pastafarians but their establishment of FSM as a deity which is the mockery. Anyway, it's a good parody and I always get a laugh out of it. --Ed Poor 12:04, 9 April 2007 (EDT)
Yes, those are my thoughts, too. Just found those sentences next to each other a tad confusing. Thanks for verifying/clarifying. --Sid 3050 12:13, 9 April 2007 (EDT)
The purpose of this ruse of a vulgar depiction is the same one used in Germany from 1933 to 1945 against certain religious groups. There are still present today those who get a laugh or two from those depictions. The historic use of these types should therefore be presented in their appropriate historic context. Their associations should be noted to allow such distinctions to be presented. You can still go to places where this kind of stereotyping isn't such a light hearted poke in the ribs. Savvy?--Roopilots6 12:09, 23 November 2007 (EST)

Food for thought

Finally a theory I can sink my teeth into. I can't stomach much of the tripe that evolutionists bring to the table.

This doesn't mean that ID can explain the origin of life, but rather that ID asserts naturalism can't either. --Ed Poor 12:02, 9 April 2007 (EDT)

The whole problem with this ID discussion is that both attackers and defenders of ID don't see the difference between the scientific and the religious domain. The scientific domain describes WHAT happens, and here the only theory available is evolution. The religious domain however, describes WHY it happens, and here everybody should be free to find an explanation. Christians will say God coordinates the whole process, while atheists will say it is just a natural process, where everything happens by accident and without a deeper meaning.—The preceding unsigned comment was added by Carcoke (talk)

Your analysis is incomplete. The Bible does indeed say what happened, and in what order. It even says when it happened. Oh, sure, estimates of the "when" vary, with a range of about 320 years (215 years for the Sojourn in Egypt, 60 years for the birth of Abraham, and 45 years for the chronology of the Divided Kingdoms Northern and Southern). But you can't get around this simple fact: that the Bible contains back-to-back narratives of human history that span the entire time from creation to the Crucifixion and about thirty years after that. It is the only single source that can make this claim (although The Annals of the World reviews history from multiple sources to cover the same period).
Now the distinction you draw is all very well. But when the Bible does make a statement on the what and even the when as well as the why, you have to deal with it.--TerryHTalk 09:02, 11 April 2007 (EDT)
So what will you do when the Bible says one thing, and the Koran, Talmud or another religious scripture tells another thing. You may believe that the Bible is right, but you can't tell other people that they have to deal with it. Otherwise you say that the Bible (and with it Christianity) is superior to other religions, which seems a very dangerous statement to me.
See Debate topics. --Ed Poor 06:31, 12 April 2007 (EDT)
Dangerous? If you lived in Nazis Germany between 1933 - 1945, or Russia, China, Cuba, ...etc. I'm currently sitting in a country where freedom of religion and speech still apply. Where anybody can say their religion is superior to every other. Liberty and freedom to say and believe what your conscience believes. Maybe some believe that is dangerous. Is that what you mean by being very dangerous?--Roopilots6 12:44, 24 November 2007 (EST)

FSM and ID criticism

Critiques of Intelligent Design should be discussed at Talk:Intelligent design, and they should be aimed at improving the article. --Ed Poor 06:56, 12 April 2007 (EDT)

A tangle of pasta

ID opponents argue that Intelligent Design claims to explain the origin of life, and contrast this "claim" with Pastafarians' nonsensical explanations of Global Warming, gravity and UFOs.

  • Which opponents have argued this?

Self-professed believers have called themselves "Pastafarians" (reference to FSM's "noodly appendages").

  • Very funny, but hardly encyclopediic.

FSM is used by atheists, such as Richard Dawkins [1], as a modern version of Russell's teapot.

  • This needs to be fleshed out before mentioning it.

A book was released in 2006, to explain most of the idea.[1]

  • If there's really a book, is it about the parody itself, or is it a critique of Intelligent design?

The parody was created to mock the teaching of Intelligent Design in Kansas science classrooms. [2]

  • Too obvious for words.

I explained what's wrong with each thing I cut, using bullet points. --Ed Poor 10:44, 20 April 2007 (EDT)

Yes,there really is a book. It is both an expansion of the parody and a critiqque of Intelligent design.Smedricksman24 02:46, 5 May 2007 (EDT)

Liberal Deceit

Could someone explain how this category demarcation is appropriate? I can grant you the "liberal" part (though I personally think that there's nothing actually liberal about it), but there just is no evidence of deceit. Using the word deceit implies that they are hiding their motives; they say they are a parody religion and they say precisely what their motives are. Maybe a link to the site would help, so you can see for yourself? HelpJazz 10:53, 28 October 2007 (EDT)

I believe that they are deceitful because they are really atheists and rather than saying they want God out of the classroom, they make this ridiculous parody that mocks religion and God. That seems like deceit to me --Konservativekanadian 12:41, 28 October 2007 (EDT)

It's fine if you believe it, but this is an encyclopedia not an op ed section. The Comandments state "Everything you post must be true and verifiable" and "Always cite and give credit to your sources" and "Do not post personal opinion on an encyclopedia entry."
If we take a look at the official site, we find the following statement:
Q: Are you an atheist / heathen / what?
A: I don’t have a problem with religion. What I have a problem with is religion posing as science. Teach Creationism in school, fine, but don’t teach it in a science classroom...."
So if you want to make the claim that he is flat out lying, you need some way to back that up, other than just a gut instinct. HelpJazz 13:10, 28 October 2007 (EDT)

Seems more like liberal satire to me. A lot of liberals use satire and snark to make conservatives sound dumb. In fact, you might want to create a new category, "liberal slander," or something like that, and this article might be better suited for that then deceit.-Darius 13:16, 28 October 2007 (EDT)

Satire, yes. The creator of the "religion" (and it's "followers") openly admit that Pastafarianism is supposed to be satire. I still don't think anything more serious (such as deceit or slander) has been properly shown, however. HelpJazz 16:16, 29 October 2007 (EDT)
I think it's more liberal hypocrisy than liberal deceit. - Borofkin2 21:53, 31 October 2007 (EDT)
On a related note, may I ask why my edit removing the words "thinly veiled attempt" was reverted? I feel that the statement as it stands now implies that Pastafarians are hoping to deceive somebody about their intentions. They're not. To say that it is a "thinly veiled attempt" at mockery is like saying that calling someone a "dumb stupid-face" is a "thinly veiled attempt" at insult. The phrase is unnecessary and inaccurate. Rstayor 14:52, 9 November 2007 (EDT)
This doesn't strike me as a mockery of the Christian religion, more of a counter-point to Intelligent Design. Teach the controversy, teach ID, evolution, and Pastafarianism! Barikada 19:26, 16 January 2008 (EST)

I didn't know straw man arguments were encyclopedic

Seriously, why is this even here? That Dawkins uses it and that there's a book about it hardly makes it notable. Dawkins is not the atheist god (though they treat him that way, ironically enough) and his word is not truth, and any idget can get a book published by some no-name company and sold on Amazon.com (e.g. William Rivers Pitt). That being said, I could see this being briefly mentioned in the Intelligent Design article in a list of the many straw man arguments atheists/evolutionists use against ID, but it really doesn't deserve its own article. Jinxmchue 10:30, 5 December 2007 (EST)

We've got an article on dazzle painting but not one on camouflage, I doubt notability is a big concern. Aside from that, it's here because it's useful for debates. Barikada 19:26, 16 January 2008 (EST)
  1. http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/2006-03-26-spaghetti-monster_x.htm
  2. “Celebrating” Christmas at the “Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster” - Evolution News & Views