Pulling out some random quotes, because if it's not out-of-context, it's not relevant:
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Maybe you shouldn't fixate on yourself too much.
Perhaps those who are religious should fixate on themselves more, and stop trying to be the moral police for others. I speak largely in the first person because I am espousing my beliefs and opinion. I do generally agree that atheists, in general, have a sort of air of intellectual superiority that I don't feel is grounded in reality. The vast majority of the world's greatest thinkers have been religious in some form or fashion, so I can't say that atheists are, by and large, more intelligent.
However, being an intelligent Christian (or member of any faith) is recognizing that faith's relation to what reality is. There is a significant problem with people using faith as a basis for flat Earth theory, or the claim that dinosaurs and man existed at the same time. This is a serious issue that needs to be addressed, because these are people who are actively attempting to undermine scientific study.
Likewise, those of the WBC, or other organizations who feel it their duty to fix or condemn homosexuality, or abortion, or undermine stem cell research, or methods we have in place to prevent unwanted pregnancy and the spread of STD's are similarly causing significant serious harm in the world, and you cannot deny that those beliefs are at least expressed in a religious manner.
As I have stated before, I would personally be offended to see my faith corrupted in such a manner. Turning the lens back on myself, do I hate atheists who incessantly mock the faithful? It depends largely on how the point is made, much in the same way that I treat Christians. Reasonable, insightful discussion is not something I am ever against, though the mocking of belief in an invisible man in the sky thing goes a bit far sometimes.
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Perhaps you should pay more attention to statements that imply the religion should have "no influence" on public life. Seeing as how religious people vote based on their beliefs, that would imply religious people don't have the right to vote because somehow that violates the First Amendment. Pretending that school prayer and government buildings ith scripture (the first a long-dead issue, the second entirely cosmetic) are solely the issues at hand is disingenuous. Or how about atheists advocating that, essentially, children not be allowed to practice religion? A more insididous attack is hard to imagine.
The first is not a long-dead issue, Huckabee advocated prayer in schools shortly after the Sandy Hook Elementary shootings. The second is also not entirely cosmetic, though it is a fight that I, personally, don't care about. The purpose, also, in providing examples is not to imply that these are the only issues at hand, but simply that they are some of the issues at hand.
In more direct response: I don't imply that religion should not inform public life, people should have the freedom to vote and advocate for the things they see fit in the manner that they see fit. If you find gay marriage to go against your religious doctrine, then you should be free to speak against it, just as I find no issue with it, according to my religious doctrine, and should also feel free to speak for it. The implication that the removal of religious material from government-operated institutions somehow removes the capability for a person to make decisions on a religious basis is silly.
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As a matter of fact they very much are in the interest of rational thought. Furthermore, all religions are not automatically equal, and your attempt to assume they are simply becuase they're religion is typical question-begging for which atheists are known. The fact of the matter is that I have a book full of evidence in favor of what I believe, the known existence of the nations and major characters of that book, the inexplicable conversion of a specific {harisee from Tarsus, and the fact that the survival and world expansion of Christianity from the tribal religion of Judaism in the face of Roman persecution. While none of this comes close to legal or logical "proof" of christianity, they are evidence that doesn't exist for ancient Egyptian religions and if you do not think so then you don't understand the concept of evidence.
Furthermore, attempts to argue for or against religion are not their own sort of fallacy. You are fundamentally incorrect.
I am not one to waste words, the phrase that I used was "attempting to rationally argue for or against religion is its own sort of fallacy." Religion, inherently, requires faith, which isn't a rational construct. Having faith is as much feeling as it is thinking, and is not a dispassionate activity. Therefore, attempting to argue for or against faith purely on reason alone doesn't work, because it ignores the emotional weight of that faith, something which cannot be reasoned against.
As for your book full of evidence, I'm not entirely certain as to what book you mean. If you mean the Bible, it is not an historically accurate record, and even contradicts itself on a number of things. There is a vast amount of information stated as fact within the Bible which cannot be corroborated, and therefore, cannot be accepted, reasonably, as fact. In addition, the specific examples quoted don't lend any evidence to Christianity being any more accurate or correct than the documents for any other religion. Christianity is hardly the only religion to survive persecution to have widespread influence.
As for the historical existence of characters and nations from the Bible, this much is true, but that implies that I should give Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter the same weight, which I think we all would agree is silly. Containing facts does not make the entire document factual.
The Bible, itself, is what it is, which is an allegorical tale, and one that has been pretty effective at that. But when you start making arguments for the Bible as a factual record, then you start claiming pillars of salt and worldwide floods as fact as well, which is heading down a pretty dangerous path.
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I don't understand how a lack of belief can be considered a religion. If you wish to argue that atheist movements and organizations are religious in nature, then I could agree. Otherwise, you are stating that everything is a religion, belief in a god(s) or no belief in supernatural at all. That makes no sense to me.
When discussing religion, it is often helpful to categorize things. Various religions have some wildly different sects, most notably shi'ite and sunni Muslims, but that phenomenon is apparent in Christianity as well. If the categorization of religion is your feelings in relation to morality, the creation of the universe, and what happens after you die (and also encompassing a myriad of other beliefs often associated with religion), then atheism does qualify, in the sense that you do have an opinion on those things. Agnostics are about as close as you can get to "not having a religion," in the sense that they prefer not to proffer an opinion.
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Once again, science and logic do not insist upon, believe, or choose anything. They investigate and see what they find. They may extrapolate based on what they find, but nothing is "selected" concretely. Probabilities and possibilities are investigated. Science is skepticism... all possibilities are subjected to a constant attempt to disprove them, and as such, scientific ideas are constantly discarded and reformulated to fit known facts. One of the issues with "God" is not only the lack of evidence, but the lack of falsifiability.
Individuals may select a scientific premise and treat it like dogma. In the rare cases where those in the scientific community do this, it hinders progress, rather than promotes it -- yet another way in which such "hard atheism" might resemble religion. Science never stops digging, but faith and belief presuppose that the answers have been found to satisfaction. This presupposition of having already found the answers is the enemy of knowledge.
Claims as to the perfectly rational nature of science ignore the fact that science is a construct of people, and inherently has to subscribe to the non-rational nature of human beings. Try as we might, we cannot view the universe as purely objective and rational beings, because none of us are such beings. Scientists, by and large, get sucked into their own subjective viewpoints quite often, most notably overall in the climate change debate, where it's difficult to find any concrete, objective discussion on the matter.
Making the assumption that science is purely rational and has no personal bias is a form of hubris that I don't personally subscribe to. In the grand scheme of things, science and reason inevitably prove out as rational and objective because they're shooting at a moving target. We believe the atom to be indivisible, until we find proof that it isn't, and then we change our beliefs. It's that ability to change the belief in the face of evidence to the contrary that provides science a more logical viewpoint on the way things are.
It's not that I'm attempting to prove science to be illogical, or without reason, but a blind belief in science is as useful to rational thought as a blind belief in a god.
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The issue you are running into is that the overwhelming majority of religious individuals are unable to comprehend not having a religion. Because many nonreligious individuals experienced attempts at religious indoctrination early in life, even a great deal of atheists can not comprehend the lack of religion. Religion is so thoroughly ingrained in their thinking that they are fundamentally incapable of conceptualizing not believing, as religion demands above all else that you believe. This leads to the deeply flawed notion that atheism is a religion.
Unfortunately, the weight carried behind a word such as "indoctrination" inherently defeats any attempt to discuss the concept. We are all indoctrinated, in some form or another, from birth, and shaking precepts which we have been reinforced to believe all our lives is something that is extremely difficult for anyone, whether it be religious belief, or your grandmother not being able to check her e-mail without formatting her hard drive.
The belief that science provides the answers to all things is as much indoctrination as belief in a religion. Science does have the advantage of being able to consistently and repeatedly prove certain things, but science cannot explain everything, and for that we turn to imagination. The healthy means of creating suppositions about the unknown is in allegory. The unhealthy means is applying that belief as fact.
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Not so much, Corolinth. The problem isn't extant, residual indoctrination; the problem is moving from a point of acknowledged ignorance (we can't know) to a definitive statement of belief either way. It takes belief to categorically deny the existence of those things beyond our perceptual and observational limitations -- the Supernatural. Now, we can encumber the Supernatural with some 4000 years of additional faith systems, stigma, and connotative attachments, but that doesn't change the fact that the Supernatural is ultimately everything beyond our observational reality. Quarks were Supernatural to the Greeks.
Had a paragraph here, but that was basically Talya and Sam's posts.
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After all if I really believe what I believe how could I not? Penn Gillette (of all people) has a great quote about that.
I generally don't cotton to Penn's discussions on religion, given his pretty radically anti-religious bent. However, there is, in this, a point that I like to make quite a bit.
Those who attempt to defend their beliefs are, inherently, unsure of those beliefs. In a sense, everyone obviously believes that their way of thinking is better than everyone else's, because if they didn't believe that, they wouldn't think that way. It's a rational viewpoint to take on this subject, and one which often goes ignored.