Holy Shi'ite rookThis reedy voice wow feels like im sitting in church again. The devil is within me damn straight mr peterson ..
How to say religion is inherently harmful without saying "religion is inherently harmful".
Why can't they all just get along and practice that love and kindness they preach? Don't they share the goal of making the world a better place for all humanity?
How to say religion is inherently harmful without saying "religion is inherently harmful".
Why can't they all just get along and practice that love and kindness they preach? Don't they share the goal of making the world a better place for all humanity?
That would be funny if after all this time the anti-Christ emerged just to be eaten by rook
Giggity-gooDefine "eat".![]()
the solution is wiping religion off the face of the planet, and replacing religious values with secular ones. No amount of heartfelt kumbaya speeches from JP is gonna solve the problem that religious belief can make you do heinous shit while believing you are serving the creator of the universe.
atheism forces you to think, religion does the oppositethe solution is wiping religion off the face of the planet, and replacing religious values with secular ones. No amount of heartfelt kumbaya speeches from JP is gonna solve the problem that religious belief can make you do heinous shit while believing you are serving the creator of the universe.
I can assure you, atheism is much worse.
atheism forces you to think, religion does the oppositethe solution is wiping religion off the face of the planet, and replacing religious values with secular ones. No amount of heartfelt kumbaya speeches from JP is gonna solve the problem that religious belief can make you do heinous shit while believing you are serving the creator of the universe.
I can assure you, atheism is much worse.
programming
I don't care what Christians think, I was talking broadly about religion, and "programming" is just a framing for belief structures, not a position on individual religions. If you think the framing is poor, feel free to point out why, but the specifics of any particular belief system aren't relevant to the point.
Just FYI, this framing extends beyond religion. Atheism is only an absence of religious programming, the whole point of what I was saying is that this void is filled by something else (other types of programs, some good and some bad).
Religion is a limiter but also a mover. Atheism is the absence of these limits and movers (but nature abhors a vacuum).
That's fine if you think atheism isn't sheltered from programming and you are including everyone in this, that would be fair. But that wasn't the impression I got when you said,
Religion is a limiter but also a mover. Atheism is the absence of these limits and movers (but nature abhors a vacuum).
lol here comes the "but, but, Stalin and Mao did terrible things too"atheism forces you to think, religion does the oppositethe solution is wiping religion off the face of the planet, and replacing religious values with secular ones. No amount of heartfelt kumbaya speeches from JP is gonna solve the problem that religious belief can make you do heinous shit while believing you are serving the creator of the universe.
I can assure you, atheism is much worse.
False. Besides, if you think Christian nations are more dangerous than Atheist regimes, then you don't know much about the history of these things. Joseph Stalin alone has done more harm with his atheism than any known figure in Christendom.
of course, but no one has ever committed heinous acts to serve the absence of religious belief. It is when people are under influence of blind faith (in metaphysical concepts or otherwise), primal instincts, and psychopathy that they do such things. If the ideal of humanity is a peaceful, harmonious, and productive existence, then one needs to apply some very rigorous thinking about what ethical principles to apply to achieve that. Religious texts contain both productive and counterproductive imperatives towards that end, and in the final analysis one needs to apply secular ideas to figure out what's what.Wiping out religion is highly unlikely, and it won't easily solve the problems you think it will. At the same time, atheism is not going to cause people to turn into Stalin, but it might give people the opportunity to be horrific in ways they wouldn't otherwise have.
lol here comes the "but, but, Stalin and Mao did terrible things too"atheism forces you to think, religion does the oppositethe solution is wiping religion off the face of the planet, and replacing religious values with secular ones. No amount of heartfelt kumbaya speeches from JP is gonna solve the problem that religious belief can make you do heinous shit while believing you are serving the creator of the universe.
I can assure you, atheism is much worse.
False. Besides, if you think Christian nations are more dangerous than Atheist regimes, then you don't know much about the history of these things. Joseph Stalin alone has done more harm with his atheism than any known figure in Christendom.
when it comes to genocidal communists, at least we can reason about the ends and means of their projects. That's a whole different category than someone having murderous hate towards people purely based on religious and metaphysical views. You can, in theory, do something about the former, not so much about the latter.
and when they do, you can't show them how they are or might be wrong because those justifications are faith-based and not reason-based.
Christopher Columbus was Christian. 55 million dead indigenous Americans.
One can just as easily associate atheism with Stalin as they can Columbus with Christianity. It’s a non-sequitur really, history demonstrates that monsters are created independent of their faith or beliefs.
and when they do, you can't show them how they are or might be wrong because those justifications are faith-based and not reason-based.
Why would this be any different than any other belief/person and their views?
and when they do, you can't show them how they are or might be wrong because those justifications are faith-based and not reason-based.
Why would this be any different than any other belief/person and their views?
No, it wouldn't, which is why I don't like politics very much.
Man, I was looking at https://www.politifact.com/ yesterday and it's surprising how many things politicians say that everyone talks about that are either false, mostly false, or half truths. Very little that is said ends up being true. But many people treat them as if they are true. Yeah, it's the same.
1000 years ago baghdad was the commercial and scientific capital of the world, with all kinds of cultures and nationalities doing trade, scientific research, and peaceful co-existence in the middle east. Nowadays the muslim world is literally centuries behind the western world in terms of economic, social, and scientific development, thanks to al-ghazali in the 10th century who turned islam into a anti-scientific, revalation-first ideology. what would be good for 'world's economy' is if the muslim world continued along the path of the islamic golden age - when science and secular ideas took precedence over metaphysical dogmatism.If you take away religion, let's say, from India or the Muslim world, you can bet social cohesion would erode and weaken that world's economy.
Maybe we should look at how/if they are living by the ethics put forward in the Bible?
I hear people say all the time, "You can't blame what atheists do on atheism" but they are very quick to say, "You can blame what Christians do on Christianity." It's a double standard.
The point is, what does the Bible and the NT say about how to treat people?
1000 years ago baghdad was the commercial and scientific capital of the world, with all kinds of cultures and nationalities doing trade, scientific research, and peaceful co-existence in the middle east. Nowadays the muslim world is literally centuries behind the western world in terms of economic, social, and scientific development, thanks to al-ghazali in the 10th century who turned islam into a anti-scientific, revalation-first ideology. what would be good for 'world's economy' is if the muslim world continued along the path of the islamic golden age - when science and secular ideas took precedence over metaphysical dogmatism.If you take away religion, let's say, from India or the Muslim world, you can bet social cohesion would erode and weaken that world's economy.
and if you call what's going in middle east nowadays 'social cohesion' then fuck me, we must be living on different planets.
Maybe we should look at how/if they are living by the ethics put forward in the Bible?
I hear people say all the time, "You can't blame what atheists do on atheism" but they are very quick to say, "You can blame what Christians do on Christianity." It's a double standard.
The point is, what does the Bible and the NT say about how to treat people?
Atheism is not a set of beliefs, it is the absence of a set of beliefs. Atheists as a tribe is a framing I take issue with. It's like grouping the worlds into "fans of Elvis" and "not fans of Elvis". The fans of Elvis have a meaningful commonality, the notfansofElvis do not.
Religious beliefs require religious institutions to uphold them. That's it.
How many crimes are committed citing atheism as a driving factor? How many wars started? While I am skeptical of claims regarding the overall moral output of religious and non-religious actors, it makes a lot more sense to ascribe causality to a positive belief. If the absence of that belief is correlated with bad outcomes, then it makes more sense to frame this as a protective property of that belief rather than a harmful property of lack of belief.
I think you would benefit if instead of acting as an advocate for your religion, you tried to advocate for religion overall. This would more directly address the claims that others are making. After all, atheists don't only reject the Christian God.
I know it is easy to say atheism is a "lack of belief." However, there does seem to be a uniting factor for atheists which is that they don't believe in God and especially don't want to believe in God. So it is not only that it is a "neutral" or "negative" belief, but an active belief against the belief in God. Words are very very cheap. I've seen so many atheists say nothing unites atheists and then they go on to quote their favorite atheists as some sort of proof against the existence of God. There are only so many minds within the scope of atheism. Just like any other movement (talking about the New Atheists here), there are actors which people actively follow. Not to mention that a lot of university professors are actively discouraging belief in God. Is it any wonder that the church is on the decline in the west when the "best and brightest" are actively working against the positive beliefs that Christianity purports? So even if you want to say that atheism is limited in what it defines as positive beliefs, the stance that atheism has is definitely against the belief in God. We can get into a big thing about the separation between atheism and anti-theists, but it's mainly the same thing: if atheists simply refrained from believing in God, then they really should not give any care for whether other people believe in God or not. But my experience shows even people like Bart Ehrman who goes on record saying he doesn't care what people believe actively work against people believing in God. If all things are equal, then don't believe in God. No problem with that. But when atheists actively work against believing in God (which I think is true the vast majority of the time) then it is no longer a "lack of belief" but, and even if I want to be charitable here, working to forward that other people also have a "lack of belief." Maybe that is not you or what you are about. That's fine. But just as you might not be all about evangelizing for the sake of atheism, there are plenty of people who are.
It's not a quote. It's what I think the meaningful difference is between religion and non-religion, divorced from the unknowable truth value of any specific claim. The way you're responding to this implies that you feel it's valence-negative. I intended it in a valence-neutral way. What I mean is that the perpetuation of religious beliefs is near 1:1 with the institutions that uphold them. Think of it this way, if aliens exist, if sufficiently intelligent they'll figure out geology, but they won't write the bible. I don't really understand what you were responding to.Religious beliefs require religious institutions to uphold them. That's it.
There are antitheists like myself and Cog (and Froyd?), but that's an additional position on top of being atheist. I don't believe in God and I believe believing in God is a bad thing and these are two separate positions. I personally haven't heard anything about new atheism since... I dunno it's been like a decade? I don't know who Ehrman is.
It's not a quote. It's what I think the meaningful difference is between religion and non-religion, divorced from the unknowable truth value of any specific claim. The way you're responding to this implies that you feel it's valence-negative. I intended it in a valence-neutral way. What I mean is that the perpetuation of religious beliefs is near 1:1 with the institutions that uphold them. Think of it this way, if aliens exist, if sufficiently intelligent they'll figure out geology, but they won't write the bible. I don't really understand what you were responding to.Religious beliefs require religious institutions to uphold them. That's it.
Mmmm... I intended on responding to your whole post but these posts are getting longer and longer and it feels like you're conflating what I say with other people's positions. These post formats where we simultaneously discuss lots of smaller points without focusing on root causes of divergence never go anywhere, so I'll leave it here. Good luck.
Wiping out religion is highly unlikely, and it won't easily solve the problems you think it will. At the same time, atheism is not going to cause people to turn into Stalin, but it might give people the opportunity to be horrific in ways they wouldn't otherwise have.