Kindralas wrote:
Unfortunately, though, all you can present as evidence that religion causes any of those things is opinion, well-educated opinion that I would often agree with, but nevertheless opinion.
You don't need statistics or numbers to prove something. If you watch a car drive past, you can state with a fact that the car runs. Nothing I've stated can be argued with anything that doesn't amount to "Black is white."
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At any rate, most "religious" wars can be explained with other causes aside from religion. You can also, likewise, explain the oppression of groups with factors aside from religion. Religion, also, was the primary source of education and learning in Europe in medieval times.
me wrote:
nobody can legitimately deny the number of wars that religion has played a factor in. Those wars may not have been wholely fought for religious reasons, but without religion, many would not have been enabled.
Of course they have additional causes, but without religion, they would never have happened.
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As wasting resources goes, you'll have to define what a waste of resources is, as well as what you consider to be productive. I doubt you can find a satisfactory definition for either, but in all fairness, I'm a semi-agnostic nihilist, so proving the worth of anything to me is a little difficult.
Church donations first go to church activity - clergy, churches, missionary work, conversions. Real charity work is a sideline for the church. They are in the business, first, of making more believers.
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Your argument about religion and morals rings false given the above statement. Just because other things can, in fact, teach morals, doesn't mean you can ignore the positive relationship that religion has to morals for the majority of people who follow some form of religious teaching.
Without religion, there is less war, less oppression. Religion isn't the sole cause of these things, but a significant contributing factor.
Without religion, people still have just as strong a morality as they do with it - and furthermore, it's better focused. No more are they worried about who is doing what with which body part, but on things that actually matter.
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In reference to sex and religion, you seem to have a particular bone to pick in that area, which is its own discussion. The attachment of puritanical views on sex and religion is primarily a New World phenomenon, and therefore, can be attached more to North American culture than purely to religion.
Not at all. The villification of sex is something that existed in ancient Israel, and continued throughout europe. It happens in Hinduism (yes, the same religion that gave us the Kama Sutra), and even Buddhism. I linked Sex & God in another thread, I really recommend reading it.
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But where it comes to traumatizing others, I would condemn the people who do such things and refute the statements which would say such things, but I wouldn't condemn an entire religion because some fanatic has seen fit traumatize others with its teachings.
Except it has been integral to these religions teachings for thousands of years.
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If another human being finds solace and comfort in the church, then who are you to attempt to take that away from them? They are, in no way, harming you or society in any fashion by hosting a bake sale and meeting with their pastor when going through troubling times. It is relatively easy to ignore the normal, reasonably healthy people who are helped in countless small ways by religion and focus on the atrocities committed in the name of the same religion, but that doesn't mean that those small benefits didn't happen. Likewise, I'm sure you've not found the same sort of peace and community in religion that others have, I haven't found it either. But just because I don't find it there doesn't mean others can't, or shouldn't be able to.
I didn't say
that was harming society. I said it was of dubious benefit. I understand, most of these people are "not ready to be unplugged. And many of them are so inured, so hopelessly dependent on the system, that they will fight to protect it."
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As for myself, I choose to view religion the way I view almost everything: There is a lot of good, and a lot of bad, and I take exception with anyone trying to characterize the discussion as though only one or the other exists. Fanatical devotion to the condemnation of religion is as healthy and useful to society as fanatical devotion to a religion, and the persecution of the religious is no different than any persecution perpetrated by religion.
Seeing and experiencing what religion does... I do not understand this. Religion is basically just authoritarian rule-making based on imaginary fables. I think there can only be benefit from pushing back the veil and exposing it, helping people think rationally. I feel the same way about superstitions in general, the concept that Keynesian economics is a sustainable system, environmental alarmism, union entitlement, and the idea that a government "nanny state" can make people better. People need to know. I know the vast majority of people will still fall back on their fictional crutches, but reading or listening to well-spoken people like Stephen Fry, Bertrand Russell, Christopher Hitchens, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Richard Dawkins, and so many others eventually helped me completely drop the idea that there's any evidence for God or merit to religion. Even though some of their arguments are flawed, the totality of them have an undeniable truth to a rational thinker. And I keep reading. I keep watching debates. I keep looking for the religious counterarguments that ring true when viewed through a critical and rational eye. Long ago I begged the world to prove God's existence to me. A decade later, I'm convinced that, while God can never be disproven, nobody has ever shown a shred of empirical evidence for their own religious beliefs. It's all pixies in my garden. And the more people learn to think like that, the better off they -- and the world around them -- will be. Perhaps someday someone will prove the existence of a creator-being in a rational, logical,
scientific way. At this point, those who have trained themselves to let their rational mind rule their thought process will accept it, or any other concept that is supported by logic. The same cannot be said for today's faithful.