The Musings of Jaime David
The Musings of Jaime David
@jaimedavid.blog@jaimedavid.blog

The writings of some random dude on the internet

1,117 posts
1 follower

Tag: religion

  • Let It Be: Unconventional Takes on Classic Paradoxes

    Let It Be: Unconventional Takes on Classic Paradoxes

    The world of paradoxes is often viewed as a playground for logic, mathematics, and armchair philosophers. But what if the best responses aren’t technical solutions, but philosophical shrugs — radical reimaginings that challenge the assumptions behind the question itself? Below are my reflections on some of the most famous paradoxes, not with the aim of solving them in traditional terms, but of reframing them entirely.

    1. The Raven Paradox (Color Skepticism)
    The Raven Paradox tries to challenge our understanding of confirmation by equating the observation of a green apple with confirmation that all ravens are black. But before we even get to that logic, I raise a simpler, deeper point: what is black? What is color? If we cannot consistently define or agree on the nature of perception, how can we build logic atop it? My view turns the paradox inward — to our assumptions about reality itself. If blackness is a subjective construct, then confirmation becomes a house of cards. The paradox isn’t about logic. It’s about trust in perception.

    2. The Liar Paradox (“Just Let It Be”)
    “This sentence is false.” If it’s true, then it’s false; if it’s false, then it’s true. Classic loop. But rather than getting trapped, I propose doing nothing. Just let the contradiction exist. This is a nod to non-dualism, to Zen: some things just are. Not everything broken needs fixing. Some sentences loop because they mirror the looping nature of thought and language. What if the point is not to resolve it but to accept it? Maybe the best response is simply silence — a conscious, defiant shrug.

    3. The Unexpected Hanging Paradox (Subjectivity Acceptance)
    In this problem, a man is told he’ll be hanged on a surprise day — and concludes it can’t happen. But instead of trying to outwit the judge with recursive logic, I argue: why not accept the premise as-is? Life is full of surprises. The very attempt to outthink life’s randomness is often futile. We don’t control the timeline, and pretending we do is hubris. Let unpredictability be unpredictable. The paradox loses its teeth when we stop trying to solve it and just live with ambiguity.

    4. The Barber Paradox (Outside-the-Box Assumptions)
    The barber shaves everyone who doesn’t shave themselves — so who shaves the barber? I suggest he does it after hours, or maybe he goes to another barber. This isn’t being glib — it’s being practical. These paradoxes assume impossibly rigid systems. But reality isn’t that rigid. People break rules, adapt, cheat systems. The solution isn’t within the rules — it’s in questioning the rules themselves. Once you pop the box open, you see how artificial the dilemma is.

    5. The Sorites Paradox (Heap of One Grain)
    If one grain doesn’t make a heap, and adding one more never does either, then when does a heap appear? Instead of chasing a line, I say: there is no line unless we draw it. The idea of a “heap” is a social construct — useful, but not absolute. This paradox asks a question society quietly answers every day: by agreeing, arbitrarily, on thresholds. That’s not failure — that’s function. We live by consensus fuzziness, not perfect clarity.

    6. The Ship of Theseus (Design Continuity)
    Is a ship that has had all its parts replaced still the same ship? Most answers wrestle with identity through material continuity. I answer with design and purpose. If the ship still performs the same function, has the same design, and carries the same intention — isn’t that the continuity that matters? Real-world identity is rarely about atoms. It’s about function, memory, story. We don’t just inherit matter. We inherit meaning.

    7. The Banach-Tarski Paradox (So What If It Works?)
    This paradox shows that a ball can be broken into parts and reassembled into two balls — mathematically speaking. It defies physical reality. My response? So what. If it works within its system, then it tells us something about that system, not about the “real world.” Not all truths are intuitive. This approach — agnostic realism — accepts that mathematics might describe worlds stranger than ours, and that’s okay. Let abstraction be abstract.

    8. The Trolley Problem (Walk Away)
    Five people will die unless you pull a lever to redirect a trolley, killing one. Philosophers debate endlessly. My solution? Walk away. You didn’t create this setup. You’re not qualified to decide. Why internalize the blame for a situation manufactured by others? Sometimes the right answer isn’t utilitarian or deontological. It’s refusal. Let the absurd moral theater collapse on itself. No heroics. No logic traps. Just don’t participate.

    9. Maxwell’s Demon (Order Is Just a Perspective)
    The demon would be doing work, right? Moving particles, sorting things — but what is order, really? Sorting stuff could just be another form of disorder. What one person thinks is neat, another might find messy. The universe doesn’t care about our filing cabinets or our sock drawers. Entropy isn’t broken just because something looks cleaner. Energy still gets used. The demon doesn’t violate the laws of thermodynamics — he just tidies up in his own way.

    10. Twin Paradox (Aging Happens Anyway)
    Everyone focuses on the time dilation and space travel. But we already see people age at different rates — stress, luck, health, life choices. It’s not a paradox, it’s just exaggerated by physics. The weirdness of twins aging differently is already baked into life. Relativity didn’t invent unfairness in aging — it just formalized it.

    11. Fermi Paradox (They Don’t Owe Us a Call)
    Maybe aliens have tried to talk to us, just not in a way we can understand. Or maybe they decided we’re not worth talking to. Maybe they’re silent on purpose. Or maybe they exist and just don’t communicate. Lack of communication isn’t lack of existence. Sometimes quiet just means quiet. Maybe we’re not alone — we’re just being ignored.

    12. Newcomb’s Paradox (Just Take the Box)
    You can play mind games about free will and predictions forever. But my answer is simple: take the box. Or don’t. Whatever you decide, own it. The point isn’t whether someone predicted your action. It’s that you act. You don’t need a philosophy degree to make a choice.

    13. Bootstrap Paradox (Who Cares Where It Started?)
    An idea, a song, a book — just appearing out of nowhere? Sounds like most trends already. Who wrote it first? Maybe no one. Maybe it just exists now. That’s good enough for me. Most of life is remixing anyway. Stop needing clean origin stories.

    14. Schrödinger’s Cat (Two Truths, Both Real)
    Dead and alive? Sure. Why not. We already live in contradictions. You can love someone and hate them. You can feel hope and despair at the same time. Reality doesn’t wait for you to open a box. It’s already tangled. Live in the tangle.

    15. Russell’s Paradox (Okay, Sure. Whatever.)
    Does the set contain itself or not? I don’t know. And I don’t care. Maybe we shouldn’t try to map logic onto everything. Maybe the point is that language breaks when we press too hard. So let it break. Let it be weird. Walk away and make a grilled cheese.

    16. The Paradox of Fiction (Fake Stuff Feels Real)
    Why do we cry over movies? Why does fiction make us feel so deeply? Because the emotions are real. That’s it. If a fake story makes you change your life, is it still fake? The source might be invented, but the outcome isn’t. Fiction matters — maybe more than reality sometimes.

    17. The Lottery Paradox (Of Course You Probably Won’t Win)
    Saying “this ticket won’t win” for every ticket doesn’t make you a hypocrite. It makes you statistically honest. One will win. Just probably not yours. We all live in the tension between individual unlikelihood and collective certainty. That’s life.

    18. The Problem of Evil (God Allows It — Why? Who Knows.)
    Maybe God wants evil to exist. Maybe He sees something we don’t. Maybe we just don’t understand good and evil well enough. Maybe most people aren’t evil — just confused, hurt, or afraid. And maybe divine silence isn’t neglect — it’s part of the design.

    19. The Omnipotence Paradox (God Can Do Whatever, Even the Impossible)
    Can God make a rock He can’t lift? Sure. Why not. He’s God. Maybe He lifts it sideways. Maybe He doesn’t lift it at all. Being omnipotent means not needing to play by rules. Don’t force logic onto mystery.

    20. Brain in a Vat (This Is the Vat)
    What if we’re just brains floating in goo, tricked by our senses? Well, we are kind of like that already. We’re meat computers interpreting electricity in a bone jar. So what? Whether it’s simulated or not, life feels real. That’s what counts. Go live it.

  • My Journey to Atheism

    My Journey to Atheism

    I’d like to tell you the story of how I became an atheist. It’s kind of a long one, so strap in for the ride.

    My story starts when I was a kid. I was born and raised Catholic. I received all of the sacraments up to and including Confirmation. I was a devout Catholic. I believed in God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit. I prayed everyday, both out loud and to myself. I went to Catholic school from grade school all the way to high school. I was pretty religious. My family and I weren’t big on going to church, however. We preferred to practice our faith at home amongst ourselves. We also didn’t believe everything that the Bible, the Pope, and Catholicism told us. Besides that, we all had a strong belief in God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit; especially me.

    I would worry everyday about the things I said or did. I also worried about the things my friends and family said and did. I was worried that if my friends, family, or I had said or did things that God did not approve of, we would be sent to Hell. Hell scared me a lot. I was terrified of it. The thought of being tortured in a place of fire and brimstone for all eternity would give me nightmares as a child. Even now, as an atheist, I still occasionally fear the possibility that Hell is real and that I would be sent to it.

    That’s how things were for most of my life; that is, until I was about to start senior year of high school. It was the summer between junior year and senior year. Junior year had just ended, and senior year was well on its way. I was excited, because that meant I was about to graduate, become an adult, and head off to college in another year! One day, sometime around the beginning of July of 2013, a friend of mine had showed me a video by the YouTuber “The Amazing Atheist.” I had vaguely heard of him before my friend had showed me the video, but this was the first time I had ever seen a video by “The Amazing Atheist” for myself. Immediately, I felt drawn to his personality. His cynical personality, abrasive humor, and straightforward bluntness had intrigued me. I wanted to watch more of his videos. As soon as I had gone home, I immediately searched up Amazing Atheist’s YouTube channel. From there, I had spent the night watching a bunch of Amazing Atheist videos. Every video by Amazing Atheist that I had watched, my perception of religion started to change. I started to doubt my faith more and more. When it was time for me to go to sleep, my mind had felt as though it had a lot of knowledge dropped onto it at once! It was intense. I felt nervous and uneasy going to sleep that night. I had a fear that God saw what I did, and that I would be severely punished for my transgressions. I fervently prayed that night to make sure that I would not go to Hell for my actions, and that I was just starting to have a lot of doubts about my belief in Him. I had told God that no matter what happened, I would always try to be a good person, and that I wanted to be judged by my character, and not my belief in Him.

    The next morning, after a good night’s sleep, I had felt more at ease. With a clearer mind, I decided to look up evidence to prove God’s existence. However, I did not want to use religious sources. All I found, however, were Bible quotes, faith websites, religious blogs, etc. I scoured the Internet far and wide to find evidence of God. I wanted to find something; anything. I wanted to find something that could give me reason to believe in God. I was not ready to let my faith go; not yet. I wanted to be absolutely sure that I did everything I could to prove to myself that there was indeed a God. After hours of researching, I came up with nothing. It was at that point that I realized that God may not be real, and that religion was man-made. Even though there was no way to prove or disprove God’s existence, from what I have seen so far, there was no point in believing in a God at all if there was no definitive way to prove or disprove His existence. It was at that point I had officially become an atheist.

    Later on that day, and in the next couple of weeks, I had started to watch a couple of atheist YouTubers other than just the Amazing Atheist. The next atheist YouTuber I had discovered after Amazing Atheist was CultofDusty. He was also pretty funny. Soon after discovering him, I had found Secular Talk, Jaclyn Glenn, and Thunderf00t, just to name a few. I had listened to all of their stories and videos regarding atheism, politics, the world, etc. They had so many interesting stories and perspectives that I had found informative and relatable. My entire belief system, worldview, personality, and philosophy were starting to change. No longer did I feel closed-minded and sheltered. I now was discovering that there was a vast world that was in my grasp. There were so many people, places, things, events, and issues going on in the world, that the world did not revolve around me. Nothing revolved around me, nor any one individual, for that matter. There were problems bigger than any one of us combined. In order to tackle them, we, as people, had to work together. We couldn’t wait for God to fix these problems. We had to take action and do it ourselves! In fact, we were the ones who created our own problems; not God. God wasn’t responsible for any of the things that we did. It didn’t make any sense for God to have been. Why would God give us free will, only to know ahead of time that our fates were sealed the moment He created us, and that we were just on borrowed time before we were judged. If we truly had free will, there would have to be situations that God Himself could not predict. However, if God is omniscient, He should know everything, and should not be surprised by any of the choices we make in life, and if He is surprised, that means that He isn’t omniscient. And that’s how the thoughts in my mind went for other aspects of God, as well, such as His omnipotence, his benevolence, and his omnipresence. The more rigorously I thought about His characteristics, the harder it was for me to believe that God was real. After that, I had found it hard for me to believe any of the other things that were presented in the Bible. From there, everything came down like a house of cards.

    It has now been over 6 and a half years since I had stopped believing in religion, and it was one of the most liberating things I had ever done! No longer did I feel the need to worry about someone constantly judging me and watching me. I was now able to be who I truly wanted to be. In hindsight, religion, to me, felt like a restraint; a hindrance. It felt like a way to control me through the use of fear; through the use of Hell. Looking back, Hell was used as a concept to scare young kids into believing religion unquestionably, or else there would be consequences for our actions. It was indoctrination, and it was very manipulative. In my opinion, religion should not be introduced to children. They do not have the faculties to understand anything about their religion. All they know is what they are told from their parents, their schools, their churches, etc. If you want to teach religion to your children, at least wait until they become a teenager, so that way, they would have experienced the world for themselves and seen what it was like. To introduce a scary concept like Hell to young children has the potential to traumatize children and scar them for life. I know that for me, personally, I still find myself to occasionally dread the possibility of Hell, even though it has been years since I have become an atheist. That is from the constant drilling into my mind the vivid depictions of Hell, and the dire consequences that would result if one were to go to Hell. It was all of that BS being shoved down my throat as a young child that causes me to still fear Hell, even as an atheist, and I don’t think that fear will ever go away completely. It will always be there, somewhere in the far reaches of my mind, occasionally popping up out of the blue. Regardless, I feel like I have now found my truest self, and I don’t think I would have if I was still a believer. As an atheist, I had found that I had become more empathetic. I can empathize and understand people better, and I find myself treating others with care and kindness. I don’t think I would have reached the level of empathy that I have for others if I was still religious. I am more open-minded, and I can find myself to relate to people of a variety of different backgrounds, including those who are believers! For me, it does not matter if a person is religious or not. To me, what matters most is whether a person is kind or not. That’s what matters most. If a person is kind and caring, then I have no problem with them whatsoever, even if they may have religious beliefs. I personally don’t find it worth it to get into religious arguments and debates with people. If people want to learn about atheism, they will do it on their own accord, just like I did. No one forced atheism onto me. I wanted to learn more about it. By doing so, I started to question and doubt my faith, and eventually became a full-fledged atheist. I did it all on my own, and in hindsight, it was the best decision of my life. I have no regrets for becoming a skeptic.