COMMENTS: 328
Why Religion Must End
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Laura Sheahen spoke with him about his provocative book "The End of Faith" and his comments at the World Congress of Secular Humanism, where this interview was conducted.
Laura Sheahen: You've said that nonbelievers must try to convince religious people "of the illegitimacy of their core beliefs." Why are these beliefs dangerous?
Sam Harris: On the subject of religious belief, we relax standards of reasonableness and evidence that we rely on in every other area of our lives. We relax so totally that people believe the most ludicrous propositions, and are willing to organize their lives around them. Propositions like "Jesus is going to come back in the next fifty years and rectify every problem that human beings create"--or, in the Muslim world, "death in the right circumstances leads directly to Paradise." These beliefs are not very contaminated with good evidence.
LS: There are beliefs--like kids believing in the tooth fairy--that I wouldn't say are dangerous.
SH: Right. Those are not as consequential. But this whole style of believing and talking about beliefs leaves us powerless to overcome our differences from one another. We have Christians against Muslims against Jews, and no matter how liberal your theology, merely identifying yourself as a Christian or a Jew lends tacit validity to this status quo. People have morally identified with a subset of humanity rather than with humanity as a whole.
LS: You're saying we should be part of the human race, not part of any particular religious or national group?
SH: Yeah. It is still fashionable to believe that how you organize yourself religiously in this life may matter for eternity. Unless we can erode the prestige of that kind of thinking, we're not going to be able to undermine these divisions in our world.
To speak specifically of our problem with the Muslim world, we are meandering into a genuine clash of civilizations, and we're deluding ourselves with euphemisms. We're talking about Islam being a religion of peace that's been hijacked by extremists. If ever there were a religion that's not a religion of peace, it is Islam.
LS: If 9/11 hadn't happened, what would be the example atheists would point to--another egregious, contemporary misuse of religion?
SH:There are so many. Let's take the extreme case, honor killing in the Muslim world. Imagine the psychology of a man who, upon hearing that his daughter was raped, is inspired not to console her, not to seek immediate medical and psychological treatment for her, but to kill her. This is an honor-based, shame-based psychology. You cannot name a Muslim country to my knowledge where it doesn't happen. It even happens in the suburbs of Paris. It falls right out of the theology of Islam.
LS: What are some problems with Judaism and Christianity?
SH: There is no text more barbaric than the Old Testament of the Bible--books like Deuteronomy and Leviticus and Exodus. The Qur'an pales in comparison.
LS: Richard Dawkins, a vocal atheist, has said the Old Testament God is a "psychotic monster."
SH: Not only is the character of God diabolical in those books, but there are explicit prescriptions for how to live that are not metaphors; they are not open to theological judo. God just comes right out and says "stone people" for a list of offenses so preposterous and all-encompassing that the killing never stops. You have to kill people for working on the Sabbath. You kill people for fornication.
LS: Doesn't the evidence show that people take their sacred texts with a grain of salt?
SH: That's the point: in the West, we have delivered the salt. Obviously, people are no longer burning heretics alive in our public squares and that's a good thing. We in the West have suffered a sufficient confrontation with modernity, secular politics, and scientific culture so that even fundamentalist Christians and Orthodox Jews can't really live by the letter of their religious texts.
We now cherry-pick the good parts. That's easier to do with the Bible because the Bible is such a big book and it's so self-contradictory; you can use parts of it to repudiate other parts of it. Unfortunately, the Qur'an is a much shorter and more unified message.
But you ask me what the scariest things are in Christianity: this infatuation with biblical prophecy and this notion that Jesus is going to come back as an avenging savior to kill all the bad people.
LS: Wouldn't it be more accurate to say that Christians believe that Jesus is going to come back, period? They don't necessarily believe that he's going to come back as an avenging person to kill people.
SH: One of the things that is overlooked by many Christians is that there is a wrathful Jesus in the New Testament. Jesus comes out and condemns whole towns to fates worse than Sodom and Gomorrah for not liking his preaching. You can find Jesus in some very foul moods.
Look at the theology of the "Left Behind" series of novels and all the religious extremists in our culture who describe a Jesus coming back with a sword and punishing those who haven't lived in his name.
Cherry-picking is a good thing and it's to be hoped that Muslims will eventually cherry-pick as well. But the Qur'an, virtually on every page, is a manifesto for religious intolerance. I invite readers of your website who haven't read the Qur'an to simply read the book. Take out a highlighter and highlight those lines that counsel the believer to despise infidels, and you will find a book that is just covered with highlighter.
LS: Let's return to your idea that people must be convinced of the "danger and illegitimacy" of their core beliefs. How can they be convinced?
SH: It's a difficult problem because people are highly indisposed to having their core beliefs challenged. But we need to lift the taboos that currently prevent us from criticizing religious irrationality.
LS: How do you bring it up, and in what context? At a party?
SH: I'm not advocating that people challenge everyone's religious beliefs wherever they appear. In a crowded elevator, if someone mentions Jesus and you start barking at them, that's not really the front line of discourse.
Whenever you're standing at a podium or publishing a book or article or an op-ed, that's when it's time to be really rigorous about the standards of evidence.
Interpersonally, we don't challenge everyone's crazy beliefs about medical therapies or alien abduction or astrology or anything else. Yet if the president of the U.S. started talking about how Saturn was coming into the wrong quadrant and is therefore not a good time to launch a war, one would hope that the whole White House press corps would descend on him with a straitjacket. This would be terrifying--to hear somebody with so much power basing any part of his decision-making process on something as disreputable as astrology. Yet we don't have the same response when he's clearly basing some part of his deliberation on faith.
LS: Many people consider America to have been founded as a Christian nation. They think many of the Founding Fathers were specifically Christian and very religious, whereas many secularists argue they weren't. You've said the issue is a dead end.
SH: I just think that it's the wrong battle to fight. Even if the [Founding Fathers] were as religious or deranged by their religiosity as the Taliban, their beliefs now are illegitimate. Secularists are on the right side of the debate and fundamentalists in our culture are distorting history. The Founding Fathers--many believed that slavery was a justifiable practice; we now agree that it's an abomination. Anyone trying to resurrect slavery because Thomas Jefferson, that brilliant man, didn't free the slaves--that's an argument that would be so appalling to us now, in terms of 20th century morality.
LS: You've said the First Amendment is insufficient to protect against encroachments of religion. What would you do to supplement what the First Amendment does?
SH: I'm not eager to monkey with the Constitution. It has to happen at the level of popular, grassroots expectations of what it means to be a rational, well-educated human being.
LS: You've said that people perceive the word "atheist" as along the lines of "child molester." How should atheists present themselves?
SH: I'm very distrustful of finding the right label because labels are ultimately sloganeering. You had the label the "brights," which is stillborn. I think atheism and secularism are also names that ultimately we don't need. We don't need a name for disbelief in astrology. I don't think we need anything other that rationality and reason and intellectual honesty.
In our society, people are rewarded for pretending to be certain about things they're clearly not certain about. You cannot have presidential aspirations without being willing to pretend to be certain that God exists. You have to pander to the similar convictions of 90% of the American population. 70% of Americans claim to feel that it is important that their president be strongly religious. No aspiring politician can fly in the face of those numbers now, so we are rewarding people for false certainty, false conviction.
Clearly, anyone who claims to be certain that Jesus was literally born of a virgin is lying. He's either lying to himself or he's lying to others. There's no experience you have praying in church that can deliver certainty on that specific point.
LS: You're saying it's not verifiable.
SH: It's just not the kind of thing that spiritual experience validates. You can pray in a room to Jesus and even have an experience of Jesus being bodily present. Jesus shows up with a whole halo and the beard and the robes and it's the best experience of your life. What does that prove? You wouldn't even be in the position to know whether the historical Jesus actually had a beard on the basis of that experience.
Yet one thing I argue in my book is that experiences like that are very interesting and worth exploring. There's no doubt that people have visionary experiences.
There's no doubt that praying to Jesus for 18 hours a day will transform your psychology--and in many ways, transform it for the better. I just think that we don't have to believe anything preposterous in order to understand that. [We can] value the example of Jesus, at least in half his moods, and we should want to discover if there's a way to love your neighbor as yourself and generate the kind of moral psychology that Jesus was talking about.
LS: What is your response to people who like science, who agree with it, but who say "It's not enough, it doesn't satisfy me, I need more?"
SH: With religious moderates, you have people talking about just wanting meaning in their lives, which I argue is a total non-sequitur when it comes down to justifying your belief in God.
If I told you that I thought there was a diamond the size of a refrigerator buried in my backyard, and you asked me, why do you think that? I say, this belief gives my life meaning, or my family draws a lot of joy from this belief, and we dig for this diamond every Sunday and we have this gigantic pit in our lawn. I would start to sound like a lunatic to you. You can't believe there really is a diamond in your backyard because it gives your life meaning. If that's possible, that's self-deception that nobody wants.
LS: What if people prefer self-deception to despair and chaos?
SH: I would argue that is really not the alternative.
LS: What is the alternative? If there's no God who orders things, some people would say there's chaos, it's all random, their life is meaningless. There really is despair out there--especially about evolution.
SH: You don't have to believe in God to have the most extraordinary, mystical experience. Personally, I've spent two years on meditation retreats just meditating in silence for 12-18 hours a day.Â
You can try to be a mystic, like Meister Eckhart in the Christian tradition, without believing Jesus was born of a virgin. You can realize the value of community and compassion and love of your neighbor without ever presupposing anything on insufficient evidence.
There are many ironies here. The [sacred texts] themselves are very poor guides to morality. The only way you find goodness in good books is because you recognize it. They're based on your own ethical intuitions. In the New Testament, Jesus is talking about the Golden Rule--a great, wise, compassionate distillation of ethics. You're doing that based on your intuition.
Hopefully, also, you recognize that stoning someone to death for not being a virgin on her wedding night, or beating your child with a rod, as it recommends in Proverbs, and which millions of Christians do in our country, that's not a good thing. You know that based on your own intuitions and the evolving human conversation about what is ethical and most conducive to human happiness.
LS: You're saying that we can figure out moral, ethical behavior on our own, without benefit of religious concepts.
SH: All we have is human conversation to do this with. Either you can be held hostage by the human conversation that occurred 2,000 years ago and has been enshrined in these books, or you can be open to the human conversation of the 21st century. And if there's something good in those books, then it is admissible in the 21st century conversation on morality.
LS: Some people say the good that religion does outweighs the bad things they get away with because they're religions.Â
SH: We can do all that good--and we are doing all that good--without any affiliation with religion. It's true there are Christian missionaries doing very fine work in Africa. There are secular groups like Doctors Without Borders doing the same work. They don't need to believe in Jesus coming out of the clouds in order to do that work.
It's not that people don't do good and heroic things on the basis of their dogma, it's just those things aren't best done on the basis of religious dogma. We can agree that famine in Africa is intolerable to us for perfectly compassionate and rational and modern reasons that have nothing to do with beliefs. We just have to believe that it is unethical that people are starving to death while we are throwing out half of our meals.
This article appeared originally on www.beliefnet.com. Used with permission. All rights reserved.
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: rbohan on May 16, 2006 3:35 AM
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You want to be an atheist, be an atheist. But don't present your nasty bigotry and smarmy arrogance as if it were "enlightened thinking".
Sheesh...with people like Sam spouting this sort of mean-spirited baloney, it's no wonder the rest of America can't stand us liberals. Half my time in activism is spent trying to convince moderates that we aren't all as condescending and arrogant as Sam and his ilk.
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: kick
» Sam's right, but saying so is bad politics.
Posted by: medstudgeek
» RE: Sam's right, but saying so is bad politics.
Posted by: kick
» RE: Sam's right, but saying so is bad politics.
Posted by: rbohan
» RE: Sam's right, but saying so is bad politics.
Posted by: jontv
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: douglashoyt
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: rbohan
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: Llama11
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: rbohan
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: hms2004
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: Llama11
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: model_consumer
» Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: rbohan
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: NYRugby
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: rbohan
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: NYRugby
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: rbohan
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: djtyg
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: djtyg
» Silly argument
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: Silly argument
Posted by: Llama11
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: djtyg
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: quissy
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: Wacre
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: Aim
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: taxidave
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: taxidave
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: taxidave
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: rbohan
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: hms2004
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: jbsequoia
» rbohan is not liberal at all
Posted by: monkopotamus
» RE: rbohan is not liberal at all
Posted by: rbohan
» Well, so much for rationalism
Posted by: afrothetics
» RE: Well, so much for rationalism
Posted by: rbohan
» RE: Well, so much for rationalism ye of little faith
Posted by: solrev
» Another Poor Choice from Alternet...
Posted by: CatDad
» Why are you arguing with this guy?
Posted by: LMNOP
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Posted by: janten on May 16, 2006 3:39 AM
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What is that supposed to mean? Islam means submission and it means the peace one experiences when one submits completely to the will of Allah/God, and Allah can be legitimately described as the unity or oneness of all beings. This describes the very essence of Islam and everything else is commentary that has been hung on this religion by people with their own political agendas.
The same is true of Christianity and Judaism. What Sam Harris is talking about, and should be clear about, is that organized religion is what has caused so many problems, arguably more bad deeds than good. Harris, himself, practices meditation. I do, too. For millennia people have done so. And some have "come back" from interesting meditative experiences through which they have transcended ordinary experiences of life -- they have had experiences "outside the box" -- and they have reported as best they could on what they experienced. Others took those reports, their interpretations of them, and built religions around them. Most often these builders of religions have had various political agendas and few or no transcendent experiences of their own. So they have created and codified rituals, rules and beliefs to follow and to impose on others. They tell others what to do and what not to do, what to believe and what not to believe, and how much to pay.
The Truth of us all being in this life together, the Truth of all that we have in common, the Truth of the Oneness that unites us, the Truth that can be found for one's self through meditation and other genuine spiritual practices is the only basis for real religion. Re-ligion means a re-uniting, a re-binding with this Truth, which some name God or Allah. This is what religion is really about. And, when realized, this Truth can only result in goodness. It is only when people submit to their own egos, to their own small selves, and then try to impose their egoic agendas on others in the name of religion that the troubles begin, and continue, and grow.
The ideal of religion is that it -- this re-binding in unity -- is and can be achieved only through one's own individual transcendent or mystical experiences. Organized religions are, by definition and design, anti-individual and, ironically, anti-religion. Individualism can't be organized. The interesting paradox, though, is that mystical unity is an individual path that can best be accomplished in groups! And that, too, is part of the mystery of life.
Mystical experience is real. It is different from logical reasoning which is of the realm of the mind, yet the two are united. The way this is expressed in the Sufi tradition I am familiar with is that "the mind is the surface of the heart and the heart is the depth of the mind" and it is recognized that both the mind and the heart represent ways of knowing and understanding, as well as that neither way alone is complete but that both ways working together harmoniously can bring one complete understanding and wisdom, and a richer, fuller life of peace.
» there is a way...
Posted by: Lauren
» RE: Organized problems
Posted by: jpinder
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Posted by: redstarwraith on May 16, 2006 3:58 AM
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And another thing. It's easy to say that Islam is not a religion of peace but it's quite another task to look at this accusation historically. As anyone with an ounce of historical background should be able to tell you, Islam brought a marked improvement in the living conditions in the Arabian penninsula and ended centuries of barbarism. Muslim conquerors typically showed far more tolerance to their vanquished than did Christians. . .but all this is a matter of record. The most important fact is that Christianity and Islam and Judaism have had more years of peaceful coexistence than of war. Religion is not the problem. Religious intolerance is.
» RE: Overlooked point
Posted by: ZPaul
» Overlooked rebuttal to the Overlooked point...
Posted by: NYRugby
» Sam never said...
Posted by: aonghus36
» try reading more carefully?
Posted by: monkopotamus
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Posted by: Poederbach on May 16, 2006 4:00 AM
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What needs to happen is to make everybody fearless by having a mind of your own. Only robots have no mind of their own. Reading Thomas Pain's The Age of Reason (1794) is a good start. More then 200 years ago this American had a mind of his own.
The second observation is that many people are kept ignorant about the facts of live by religions, it would hurt the religions if the people were knowledgeable or even worse had imagination. That would scare the hell out of religions and diminish their power.
Third observation, all politics are religious based and politics have to do with power (and money)
So I agree, end all religions
TomTom, Fearless Navigator
» RE: Fear
Posted by: hagwind
» Anti-religion often is simply ignorance of religion.
Posted by: Sojourner
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Posted by: riffraff2001 on May 16, 2006 4:07 AM
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» Use the Vatican reaction to the DaVinci Code as a guide to the truth...
Posted by: SeverelyJaded
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Posted by: Lincoln fan on May 16, 2006 4:18 AM
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» no, the BEST religion is one of personal experience
Posted by: Lauren
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Posted by: riffraff2001 on May 16, 2006 4:23 AM
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» RE: I'd also like to respond to people of faith by saying...
Posted by: Krotos
» see the response below...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» Logically speaking....
Posted by: Longdream
» RE: I'd also like to respond to people of faith by saying...
Posted by: douglashoyt
» god is an experience
Posted by: Lauren
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Posted by: ChristopherLL on May 16, 2006 4:32 AM
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» YES!
Posted by: Paul D
» RE: YES!
Posted by: Lauren
» NO!
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: NO!
Posted by: ChristopherLL
» Also...
Posted by: aonghus36
» ChristopherLL you are starting what religion has mastered
Posted by: jpinder
» RE: ChristopherLL you are starting what religion has mastered
Posted by: ChristopherLL
» YES, YES, YES
Posted by: woodford54
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Posted by: greentime on May 16, 2006 4:36 AM
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We need a religion that supports sustainability and the truths of humanity. One that includes women, and children and their wisdom. One that is inclusive, not exclusionary and punishing of those who are good but different from the male models.
So far, I haven't found one among the offerings.
» RE: We need a religion (or values) that will
Posted by: Krotos
» RE: We need a religion (or values) that will
Posted by: greentime
» RE: We need a religion (or values) that will
Posted by: Krotos
» Have you ever looked at the Native American religions?
Posted by: Lauren
» RE: Have you ever looked at the Native American religions?
Posted by: ChristopherLL
Comments are closed-
Posted by: mazel on May 16, 2006 4:38 AM
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» RE: a better world
Posted by: greentime
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Posted by: solrev on May 16, 2006 4:46 AM
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» HUH?
Posted by: Paul D
» RE: HUH?
Posted by: Saitia
» RE: HUH? re read
Posted by: solrev
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Posted by: Krotos on May 16, 2006 4:52 AM
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There can be little dispute that certain forms of religion, such as fundamentalist Islam and fundamentalist Christianity, are on the whole very bad things. But I disagree that we should aim for getting rid of all forms of faith. Mere belief in a deity or afterlife is arational or non-rational, since neither the existence nor nonexistence of these can be proven (thus atheists are also operating on faith!). The problems seem to come when you start adding on a lot of other anti-rational baggage that grossly conflicts with our empirical, scientific understanding of how the world works, such as the belief that the world was created 6,000 years ago or that somebody once turned water into wine.
I do not believe, as the interviewee appears to, that having faith necessarily means that you also have to accept myths and fairy tales as truth.
-K.Ai.-
» actually...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: actually...
Posted by: Krotos
» hahaha
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: hahaha
Posted by: Krotos
» RE: hahaha
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: hahaha
Posted by: Krotos
» RE: hahaha
Posted by: rbohan
» Again hahaha
Posted by: riffraff2001
» come again?
Posted by: Spot
» RE: come again?
Posted by: Krotos
» Let's simplify this arguement...
Posted by: aussidawg
Comments are closed-
Posted by: boing007 on May 16, 2006 4:53 AM
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Sorry, chum, there would be no religion without the secular humanism that informed it.
» Exemplary rebuttal boing007
Posted by: jpinder
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Posted by: brunowe on May 16, 2006 4:58 AM
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» disparragement? Critical is more like it.
Posted by: decembrist
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Posted by: riffraff2001 on May 16, 2006 4:59 AM
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» RE: You don't need drugs either...
Posted by: kick
» RE: You don't need drugs either...
Posted by: griggsy
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Posted by: kick on May 16, 2006 5:04 AM
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» RE: Peace thru love peace thru war
Posted by: solrev
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Posted by: medstudgeek on May 16, 2006 5:08 AM
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Besides, as the first commenter said, stuff like this gives the Repugs ammunition. "Oh, see, the liberals hate people of faith" blah blah blah. "I will stand up for the rights of the believing people of America" blah blah blah. And then we have four more years of warfare, environmental destruction, etc.
I think we need to steal religion back from the Repugs. Like it or not, America is a Christian country in the sense that most Americans are Christians. (I don't like it.) Look, Jesus said you were supposed to take care of the poor and needy. How on earth tax cuts for the rich is Christian is beyond me. (Anyone ever seen Ted Baehr's Movieguide?) At the very least the Nazarene is with us on economic issues, and probably on guns too. (Turn the other cheek...) Where does the Bible mention abortion? But hey, Jim Wallis said it better than me.
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Moonray on May 16, 2006 5:13 AM
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The foolish laws and policies passed as a result of religious coercion -- such as bans on certain medications, early abortions and even the sale of sex toys in some states (!!!) -- do enormous harm to our society. For generations children have been warped and psychologically damaged by these weird beliefs.
Let's demand that tax codes be rewritten to ensure religious groups pay taxes like anyone else. And, no, those tax breaks are not in the Constitution. They were inserted into our laws by courts that caved to pressure from the church mafia.
Comments are closed-
Posted by: SDres11 on May 16, 2006 5:15 AM
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» fantastic idea, but how?
Posted by: Lauren
» RE: How about we unite the tolerant religious people with non-religious people for a change ?
Posted by: ConnecttheDots
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Posted by: riffraff2001 on May 16, 2006 5:18 AM
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» RE: A brief history of religion...
Posted by: Spot
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Posted by: solrev on May 16, 2006 5:25 AM
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Posted by: goldgrif on May 16, 2006 5:31 AM
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I have suffered for my religion, been beaten stabbed and shot at. There are people who hold their holy books close to their chest and their guns and knives as close if not closer.
I no longer trust anyone from outside my faith and neither do my kids, and there is no reason for me to. I have seen how religious americans are, and though I do not blame all people of faiths outside mine, I dont trust. And it is the relgions fault for fostering the idea of violence and hate. And the inability of humans to use their intelligence.
Blessed BE.
» Sorry but...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: Sorry but...
Posted by: aonghus36
» RE: Sorry but...
Posted by: redjenny
» true practice of religion
Posted by: decembrist
» RE: True religion us atheists do not have one
Posted by: solrev
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Posted by: Mutternich on May 16, 2006 5:33 AM
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Posted by: metamind on May 16, 2006 5:38 AM
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Virtue is different than religion. You don't need to believe in virtue in order to discover virtue. You can try it out and discover the results you get. Go ahead and "love your neighbor" and see what happens. Go ahead and practice tolerance, truthfulness, honesty and compassion. You'll get your own results which you can use to further refine your behavior and your beliefs.
Everyone has beliefs. The question becomes one of "are you in a spell?" A spell is a web of belief which restricts your thinking about life, keeping you from possibilities which might expand your potential to create virtue. We see this in religion throughout history.
Poverty, population and prejudice are three issues which religion has failed to deal with in a rational, loving and compassionate manner. That's a broad generalization and there may be a religion which does deal with thm, but I'm unaware of what it might be so please tell me. As Jesus said, "Judge by the fruits." ( results ) The fruits of religion have often resulted in increases in poverty, population and prejudice. These are unvirtuous results. We should be seeking an end to poverty, a population in balance with nature and the ecosystem, and a reduction in the strength and acceptability of prejudice.
To deal with poverty we need to deal with the economic system, population issues and social/religous/economic prejudices. One of the basic problems is the prejudice of
"Some people are better than others" which is often re-inforced by religious belief. Religious belief is often used to justify overpopulation, poverty and economic oppression.
Simply increasing the amount of positive reinforcement whenever someone shows virtue would make a difference.
Honesty is a virtue. Let's tell the honest truth about religion
and support those people who do this. That's a good place to start in my opinion.
Steve Moyer
Candidate for U.S. Senate (VT)
http://stevemoyer.us
Think virtue. Teach virtue. Live virtue
Lightheartedness Assertiveness Faithfulness Kindness Respect Caring Flexibility Love Responsibility Cleanliness Forgiveness Reverence Compassion Friendliness Mercy Self-discipline Confidence Generosity Moderation Service Consideration Gentleness Modesty Steadfastness Courage Helpfulness Obedience Tact Courtesy Honesty Orderliness Thankfulness Creativity Honor Patience Tolerance Detachment Humility Peacefulness Trust Determination Idealism Prayerfulness Trustworthiness Enthusiasm Joyfulness Purposefulness Truthfulness Excellence Justice Reliability Unity.
» Virtue is an incredibly vague term
Posted by: riffraff2001
» population as a religious issue
Posted by: Lauren
» population as a religious issue
Posted by: Lauren
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ladybellringerm on May 16, 2006 5:45 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Peace.
» Surely, you jest
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: I think you jest...
Posted by: aonghus36
» Merely citing . . .
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: Merely citing . . .
Posted by: aonghus36
» RE: Oops! Excuse me . . .
Posted by: Moonray
Comments are closed-
Posted by: kenhymes on May 16, 2006 5:51 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Where will the re-education classes be held, Sam? Starbucks? Or do you have a more secure facility in mind?
This is not liberalism or enlightenment thinking, it's Stalinism.
What are you suggesting, a committee of scientists (that impartial, noble bunch who have brought us thalidomide, napalm, the bomb, Chernobyl, Bhopal, eugenics, electric shock therapy, and forced medication of children) to decide whose beliefs pass muster?
Shall we install Mysticism Detectors in airports?
Shall we have little children chant in unison: "I am a chemical accident! When I die I'm a rotting corpse and nothing more! Yaaaaay, rationalism!!" ?
But see, the problem is, this is a democracy. It's not up to Jerry Falwell or Sam Harris to tell me what to believe about the universe or about morality. I believe in the Holy Spirit, and I believe in social justice. There are tens of millions like me in the USA.
Every time you spout this hateful garbage, Sam, you drive one more nail in the coffin of a successful coalition to restore pluralism and democracy and the rule of law in this country. but I don't think you really care about that. You want to win, and having watched you speak a number of times, I think deep down what you want to do is hurt people.
Who was down in New Orleans after the flood? The Government took a vacation. ANSWER and Move On typed away at their computers. The churches (many of whose ideology I totally disagree with) were, and are, out in force, feeding people, clothing people, housing people.
Obviously, a great deal of damage is being done in the name of religion in this world. And in the name of democracy. And in the name of globalization and "economic progress." And in the name of "research."
Because people lie, and use excuses for their destructive behavior. It's one thing to see through the lies and hold people accountable, to establish a common purpose in commonly held institutions. It's another thing to say, "Well, science, you've screwed up too many times, so we're getting rid of you." Or, "Sorry, most of the world's population, your religious leaders have lied too many times for their own nefarious purposes, so you need to stop believing in God."
If Christianity IS the Inquisition... then Science IS Hiroshima... the United States IS slavery... Marxism IS a Stalinist prison camp.
The left is wasting much too much on this issue. Religion DOES NOT CONTROL AMERICA. RICH PEOPLE DO. THis whole topic is a very useful distraction, and a wedge being used to drive people away from the left.
Good going, Sam.
» You just don't get it
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: Ummm, yeah, sure
Posted by: tussinup
» RE: Ummm, yeah, sure
Posted by: redjenny
» RE: Ummm, yeah, sure
Posted by: schnoggi
» Sarcasm aside ...
Posted by: AdamSelene40
Comments are closed-
Posted by: riffraff2001 on May 16, 2006 5:55 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» Right on!
Posted by: Moonray
» I must disagree
Posted by: ezilla
Comments are closed-
Posted by: rsaxto on May 16, 2006 5:57 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Comments are closed-
Posted by: tussinup on May 16, 2006 6:06 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And could we puh-leeeze not have any more of the racist "clash of civilizations" crap? I don't claim to understand Islam or Islamic culture, but I am willing to listen to Muslims and let my understanding grow through dialogue. Meanwhile, Sam Harris and millions of little Sam Harris's are walking around saying "They ain't like us. We've got us a clash of civilizations here." They usually base that statement on a flash of inspiration they received (O, That rationalism!) after reading a newspaper article based on a "scholarly paper" funded by the Hoover Institution.
» Good grief people!
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: Smug new age self aggrandizement.
Posted by: schnoggi
» RE: Smug new age self aggrandizement.
Posted by: tussinup
» RE: Smug new age self aggrandizement.
Posted by: kick
» RE: Smug new age self aggrandizement.
Posted by: Saitia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: schnoggi on May 16, 2006 6:11 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
if there is a "God", "he" must exist so far outside of time and narratives, that "he" doesn't even know we are here. The whole notion that "he" needs our help to create some preferred outcome is just incredibly stupid.
Religions are supposedly about some connection to the divine, but they generally boil down to assurances about what's going to happen to your stupid little ego for eternity. I don't think we need legislation to keep people from practicing them, but boy am I glad to be alive at a point when saying you're a "Christian" (oh btw "Christianity" is descended from the people who exterminated Christ's actual followers, I'm just saying...total heresy from the get go) marks you as a muttering dangerous simpleton rather than some upstanding citizen.
when will we ever have a politician with the balls to stand up and say what bullshit it all is...on that day the world will begin to move towards real light at lonnnng last.
btw: Ken's Guide to the Bible: short and sweet, deliciously mean.
» RE: the universe doesn't require your efforts
Posted by: schnoggi
Comments are closed-
Posted by: schnoggi on May 16, 2006 6:22 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
more lazy thinking. Gd loves you for being a goldfish.
» RE: end justifies means?
Posted by: russianblue1
Comments are closed-
Posted by: vojak on May 16, 2006 6:39 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It would be great if we could all hammer out our own philosophies, but I think that is asking too much of the average person who is busy with the tasks of daily life and has no use for such creative ponderings. Besides, looking to one's own intellect, in many people's minds, runs counter to the belief that spiritual truths are larger than the thoughts of any one person.
I don't believe it is generally possible to convince people to be rational about religion. That is like trying to convince a Democrat that she should become a Republican, or the reverse scenario. It is possible, however, to teach people to be reasonable and respectful with people who do not share their beliefs. To live and let live. As Thomas Jefferson once said "...it does no injury to me for my neighbor to say there are twenty gods or no God. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg." (notes on Virginia, 1782)
Finally, I would like to point out that given the many unknownable aspects of our universe and its origins, atheism is just as dogmatic as religions that are convinced God exists. Really, the only justifiable rational stance is agnosticism.
» Religion does pick our pocket!
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: eligion does pick our pocket!
Posted by: Michael Robin
» RE: Comments
Posted by: aussidawg
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Jasonix on May 16, 2006 6:54 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But I've noticed that people create evil "religions" out of political ideology, economic theory, corporate policies, multi-level marketing, etc. The notion of a personal God isn't necessary for people to be collectively bad. If anyone knows how to defeat human evil, let me know.
» RE: Non-theistic religion is still religion
Posted by: IanA
Comments are closed-
Posted by: karyse on May 16, 2006 6:54 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The comment seciton of this article is the proof that religion, spirituality, and lack of reason is responsible for hate, fear, and loathing.
Atheism is living without belief in god; to the monotheists in this crowd -- not to worry, I only believe in one less god than you do.
» RE: Atheism is not a thing
Posted by: Jasonix
Comments are closed-
Posted by: metamind on May 16, 2006 6:57 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No, of course not. Should you have faith in the existence of truth? Yes, of course you should. This kind of faith empowers you to seek the truth and possibly find it. If you have faith that "there is no truth" then you will neither seek it nor find it. If faith in God helps you find things of value in your life then it is a good thing. If faith in God make you do crazy things, then it is a bad thing. But faith in the truth is a good thing because it produces good results. Faith in virtue is a good thing because if produces more virtue. Faith in the goodness of humanity is a good thing because people will respond well to it. Faith in the evil nature of humanity is a bad thing because people will prove you are correct.
Faith in righteousness is a good thing because it produces good results; it lets you know the difference between good and evil.
Faith in positive things yields positive results. Faith in negative things yields negative results. The proper use of faith is to believe in the positive potential of yourself, other people and the entire universe.
Therefore, it is possible that faith in the existence of God is a positive thing. Judge by the fruits.
Steve Moyer
http://stevemoyer.us
» Again sorry...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» Sizzlin' rant!
Posted by: Michael Robin
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ZPaul on May 16, 2006 7:00 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If my neighbor wants to worship Mount Kilamanjaro and believes it´s the center of the universe, it´s fine with me, until he or she starts telling me it´s what I have to believe, too. I feel pretty much the same about "The Anti-God Squad"...
» RE: The Agnostic and the AGS
Posted by: mysticpal
» RE: The Agnostic and the AGS
Posted by: redjenny
Comments are closed-
Posted by: O.B.Server on May 16, 2006 7:00 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» RE: Buddhism and Christianity...attempts that came up short?
Posted by: Jasonix
» of course not
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: right...so it's pointless
Posted by: Jasonix
Comments are closed-
Posted by: secretchief on May 16, 2006 7:18 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
However, I am far from certain that rationality alone will make our world a better place. Many philosophers seem to think that a rational discussion (Habermas for instance) will undoubtedly lead to a universal conclusion.
I do not wish to sound snotty, but I think that if you spend some of your time travelling around the world, you will quickly come to the conclusion that "rational" arguments can take you to many contradictory places. A logical or rational conclusion in Sweden will sound irrational in Alberta, not to speak about Bangladesh.
To make a long story short, I do not think the elimination of religion would mean the end of "irrational" arguments. Religious stupidity/intolerance will be replaced by cultural stupidity/intolerance. I think Erich Fromm was right when he said that our reason is just a tool that tries to validate our gut feelings.
Comments are closed-
Posted by: IanA on May 16, 2006 7:25 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Does God exist because people accept His existence? If nobody new of God would He cease to exist? Is everything in the universe connected and interdependent? Did gravity exist before Newton? Do we need to submit all understanding and belief to some authoritative scientific committee of rational thinkers to have an “approved” basis of belief. And what would be the conclusions on the diversity of definitions on such subjects as time, energy, matter and space. Would we then be restricted hence forth within the parameters defined by a new lot of self righteous people, prophets, organizing our present and future comprehension?
Sorry not enough for me. Since I do not accept that an amoeba must have the capacity to understand the universe in which it exists and that I share, why should I believe that I, Sam Harris or an august bunch of “scientists” are so much further ahead. Their arrogance and a few million years of evolution do not give them any more wisdom to dictate correctness or denial of any belief system.
No ones God started any war or did “more harm than good in the world”, Good and evil is done and defined by people. God does not use religions but people do use God. The International Academy of Humanism represent just another limited belief system organized with power and money for money and power just like any other religious grouping. So, more than I detest “Fundamentalism”, I love tolerance and would suggest that Sam Harris and a few of the commentators above meditate a little more carefully the words of Immanuel Kant’s description of Enlightenment:
“Enlightenment is man’s leaving his self-caused immaturity. Immaturity is the incapacity to use one’s own understanding without the guidance of another. Such immaturity is self-caused if its case is not lack of intelligence, but by lack of determination and courage to use one’s own intelligence without being guided by another. The motto of enlightenment is therefore: Sapere aude! Have courage to use one’s own intelligence!”
It takes wisdom not just intellect to accept that we know far more than we can prove. To condemn extremism is understandable, but to deny all beliefs that do not lend to a limited methodology, that is extreme.
» RE: God is Great-Science is Better- Science is God!
Posted by: djtyg
» RE: God is Great-Science is Better- Science is God!
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo
» A Question
Posted by: errandchild
Comments are closed-
Posted by: hagwind on May 16, 2006 7:29 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you try to critique a belief system by focusing entirely on its texts, you're going to miss a few things. That goes for Christianity, Islam, and Judaism, sure, but also for communism, socialism, feminism, the 12-step program, and all the others I can think of. The excesses of Stalin and the collapse of the Soviet Union do not prove that socialist ideas are worthless. The state hasn't withered away; that doesn't mean we don't have plenty to learn from Marx et al.
Sam Harris makes some valuable points, but some of his analysis is as ahistorical as that of the people who say things like "God said it, I believe it, and that settles it." Honor killings are not unique to Muslim countries. Not so very long ago they were widely sanctioned in Catholic and Protestant countries too. A man could kill his wife or daughter for "dishonoring the family name" and the usual laws didn't apply. (Lynching is a variant: the white woman's honor is restored or protected by killing the black man who supposedly poached on the white man's territory.) Honor killings, along with rape, suttee, witch burnings, making a fetish of female virginity, and a whole bunch of other nasty practices, are a symptom of patriarchal thinking and patriarchal institutions. Sure, the world's major religions are all deeply rooted in patriarchal societies, but sexism seems to do pretty well in secular ones as well, so let's not delude ourselves that "religion" is the only problem.
Harris also doesn't consider the distinct possibility that Islamic extremism has as much to do with the legacy of European (at least nominally Christian) imperialism in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia as it does with the Qur'an. When those 18th-century Americans rebelled against their colonial master, they used the ideas and imagery of their time and place. The 21st-century jihadists are doing likewise.
» RE: Does Harris need a history lesson?
Posted by: jesme
» RE: Does Harris need a history lesson?
Posted by: hagwind
» RE: Does Harris need a history lesson?
Posted by: IanA
» Um-m, the Qur'an doesn't support Islamist extremism.
Posted by: fool-on-the-hill
» RE: Um-m, the Qur'an doesn't support Islamist extremism.
Posted by: redjenny
» It's Even Worse When We Look at Religion's Actions
Posted by: decembrist
Comments are closed-
Posted by: jesme on May 16, 2006 7:31 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So does atheism produce mass murder?
» excuse me
Posted by: riffraff2001
» Exactly...Communism=political power nothing to do with atheism/theism
Posted by: jdwismer922
» ..which is kinda the point, innit?
Posted by: jesme
» RE: The missing question...
Posted by: jdwismer922
Comments are closed-
Posted by: jdwismer922 on May 16, 2006 7:33 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1. Atheists want to abolish all religion
2. Atheists are communists
3. Religious people are all violent vengeful, etc..
4. True Religion is (fill in the blank)
5. Atheism is a religion
6. Hitler was an atheist
7. You can't have morality w/out god
8. Life is meaningless w/out an afterlife
9. Rationalism is New Age Garbage
10. Atheists are synonomous with the Devil
» RE: Atheist here, to raise Awareness level and dispell misinformation from the panicy theists here
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Atheist here, to raise Awareness level and dispell misinformation from the panicy theists here
Posted by: kick
» RE: Atheist here, to raise Awareness level and dispell misinformation from the panicy theists here
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Atheist here, to raise Awareness level and dispell misinformation from the panicy theists here
Posted by: kick
» RE: Atheist here, to raise Awareness level and dispell misinformation from the panicy theists here
Posted by: jdwismer922
» IF it wasn't clear "this is a list of common MISCONCEPTIONS" about atheism...thanks
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Atheist here, to raise Awareness level and dispell misinformation from the panicy theists here
Posted by: laoma
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo on May 16, 2006 7:37 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I'm in church singing a hymn or gazing idly at a rushing river or moving through a crowded subway platform, I'm overwhelmed with the sensation -- the innate knowing that we're part of something present, something bigger, something conscious. Compared to the wet warmth of that knowing, your dry cold rationalism seems puny and laughably wrong. If you haven't experienced that oceanic feeling, my sympathies go out to you.
» RE: ationalism...blah
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: ationalism...blah
Posted by: tclaverdure
» RE: ationalism...blah
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo on May 16, 2006 7:37 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I'm in church singing a hymn or gazing idly at a rushing river or moving through a crowded subway platform, I'm overwhelmed with the sensation -- the innate knowing that we're part of something present, something bigger, something conscious. Compared to the wet warmth of that knowing, your dry cold rationalism seems puny and laughably wrong. If you haven't experienced that oceanic feeling, my sympathies go out to you.
» yeah we're part of something bigger...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: yeah we're part of something bigger...
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo
» Ever heard of Bertrand Russell...and the teacup theory?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: ver heard of Bertrand Russell...and the teacup theory?
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo
» RE: yeah we're part of something bigger...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: yeah we're part of something bigger...
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo
» YEAH and I always get goosebumps when I see a hottie...does that make it religious?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: YEAH and I always get goosebumps when I see a hottie...does that make it religious?
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo
» RE: yeah we're part of something bigger...
Posted by: jonesey
» RE: ationalism...blah
Posted by: kick
» RE: ationalism...blah
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo
» do you have anything intelligent to add to this conversation?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» ???
Posted by: jdwismer922
Comments are closed-
Posted by: McJulie on May 16, 2006 7:38 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And somebody else will say "amen, brother!"
And then religious liberals get offended. And anti-religious liberals pretend they don't understand how anybody could possibly be offended by being called childish, ignorant, unevolved, prone to violence, and in league with secular devils like James Dobson.
After more than 200 years it still does me no injury for my neighbor to say there are twenty gods or no God. It still neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg.
But it is unhelpful, anti-Constitutional, and also annoying, for my neighbor to say that I must ALSO say there are twenty gods or no God.
» I'm not saying you have to give up religion...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: I'm not saying you have to give up religion...
Posted by: thegreenknight
» You're the one that keeps up the sharade, look in the mirror
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: You're the one that keeps up the sharade, look in the mirror
Posted by: thegreenknight
» I'm attacking the falsehoods of political correctness...
Posted by: jdwismer922
» my practical real world solution is...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» totally agree...DOGMATIC religion is the problem...not belief in a god
Posted by: jdwismer922
Comments are closed-
Posted by: jdwismer922 on May 16, 2006 7:42 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» RE: I think we would all agree on Separation of Religion from Government
Posted by: jdwismer922
» We should all be aware...there is attack on the Separation of Religion from Government
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: I think we would all agree on Separation of Religion from Government
Posted by: aussidawg
» Absolutely.
Posted by: Krotos
Comments are closed-
Posted by: cynicaloptimist on May 16, 2006 7:46 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A lot of discussion seems to miss that point that Harris does not advocate atheism, as in "belief there is no god." In fact, he uses the term only begrudgingly. His point is rather that we must avoid dogmatic (i.e. un-provable) beliefs because they constrain our thinking and eliminate the possibility of rational resolution of differences. In other words, "belief in only that which can be proved" -- which some might consider "agnostic" (another insufficient term). He argues that a great deal of major world problems (not America's per se) can only be addressed when people stop believing unconditionally and start believing that which has direct, observable evidence.
His analogy to slavery is interesting. Can we imagine a society, perhaps in several hundred years, looking back on the 20th century and wondering, "How could those people have thought they were right? Don't they see how many problems they were causing by sticking to their dogmatic beliefs?" It simply won't make any sense to them. He argues such a society will find no less meaning in their lives and is not necessarily immoral in the absence of dogmatic beliefs -- these can come from rational, humanistic tendencies for which we have examples today. Interesting stuff to consider. Thanks, AlterNet!
» That's why I'm here...theists should fire away
Posted by: jdwismer922
Comments are closed-
Posted by: thegreenknight on May 16, 2006 7:49 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If one of Harris's supporters could please explain how this is a reasonable position to take, I'd appreciate it.
» Yes he was quoting a religious point of view...
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Yes he was quoting a religious point of view...
Posted by: thegreenknight
» LIKE i said "beliefs" he's talking about religion...
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: LIKE i said "beliefs" he's talking about religion...
Posted by: thegreenknight
» you're totally misinterpreting the context of the sentence...
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: you're totally misinterpreting the context of the sentence...
Posted by: thegreenknight
» NO
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: NO
Posted by: thegreenknight
» RE: NO
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: NO
Posted by: model_consumer
» the limits of tolerance
Posted by: hagwind
» RE: the limits of tolerance
Posted by: IanA
Comments are closed-
Posted by: djtyg on May 16, 2006 7:49 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Athiestic fundamentalism is just as evil and bigoted as religious fundamentalism. The same people saying "IF YOU DON'T BELIEVE LIKE ME YOU'RE WRONG AND YOU'RE LESS OF A HUMAN BEING FOR DOING SO!"
All of these attitudes only help conservatives. Islamic fundamentalism has helped the right force their agenda on America ever since 9/11. Hell, Bush was able to just use the word 9/11 for 3 years after the fact to get a free pass from just about everyone.
Christian fundamentalism-well, do I have to tell you how it helps the right?
And then Athiestic fundamentalism, which helps fuel the persecution complex that conservative Christianity needs to survive.
In the end, it's all bigotry. Until you decide that maybe, just maybe, that guy who believes in something different from yourself can be a decent human being who wants to be a moral person and is just as good as you are, then the left will lose.
Thanks a lot, Alternet! You've now just done more for the right wing with this article than a month long subscription to the Wall Street Journal! I hope you're happy!
And to all you commenters who say religious people should be mocked, congratulations to you as well. You're no less bigoted than the KKK or Nazis. I hope you're really proud of yourself and your self-righteousness.
» What's the Fundamentalism you speak of?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» Don't mince words.
Posted by: djtyg
» To be perfectly clear with you...
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: To be perfectly clear with you...
Posted by: kick
» Interesting....where exactly to you stand kick...are you playing both sides?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» I'm an atheist but...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» IS THIS ALL YOU HAVE THEISTS? Can't you come up with anything better than this weak argument?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: IS THIS ALL YOU HAVE THEISTS? Can't you come up with anything better than this weak argument?
Posted by: kick
» RE: IS THIS ALL YOU HAVE THEISTS? Can't you come up with anything better than this weak argument?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: IS THIS ALL YOU HAVE THEISTS? Can't you come up with anything better than this weak argument?
Posted by: kick
» RE: IS THIS ALL YOU HAVE THEISTS? Can't you come up with anything better than this weak argument?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» You're a faker.
Posted by: djtyg
» Who's a faker?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Who's a faker?
Posted by: djtyg
» Like I said...is this all you got baby...wooooo bring it holmezzz
Posted by: jdwismer922
» Are you trying to get crazeee with me hessaaaa don't you know I'm an atheist?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Just another example of how fundamentalism helps the right.
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo
» WHAT'S THE proof of the existense or non-existence of God?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: WHAT'S THE proof of the existense or non-existence of God?
Posted by: aonghus36
» ACTUALLY, I'm not..Atheism=lack of belief=a consciencous CHOICE i made..
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: WHAT'S THE proof of the existense or non-existence of God?
Posted by: djtyg
» Yeah, and your argument is that you can prove the existence of God...
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Just another example of how fundamentalism helps the right.
Posted by: djtyg
» Ok, so bring it...bring the philosophical debate...somebody will win the debate
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Ok, so bring it...bring the philosophical debate...somebody will win the debate
Posted by: djtyg
» Bushisms,Rovisms,Cheneyisms...You've learned from the best..you make a statement...
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Bushisms,Rovisms,Cheneyisms...You've learned from the best..you make a statement...
Posted by: djtyg
» Thankyou
Posted by: jdwismer922
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Posted by: ABetterFuture on May 16, 2006 8:17 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» And your point is...
Posted by: jdwismer922
» I would again to refer to Austin Cline on About.com...
Posted by: jdwismer922
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Posted by: jdwismer922 on May 16, 2006 8:30 AM
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» Much love to AlterNET...I use you as a reference guide everyday
Posted by: jdwismer922
» Props to my homeboy Sam Harris...he sends out good material all the time...
Posted by: jdwismer922
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Posted by: Moonray on May 16, 2006 9:05 AM
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1) Separate religion from government. Demand an end to the tax breaks now granted religious groups. Demand that laws based mainly or solely on religious beliefs (ban of the morning-after pill, ban on certain activities on Sunday, ban on sales of certain sex-related products, bans on gay marriage, etc.) be abolished.
2) Prohibit churches or individuals from isolating children under 18 in private schools. Require a certain amount of public instruction for all children, even if only by internet.
» YES YES AND YES...Keep them Separate,End RLUIPA, End FaithBased Initiative,American Theocrats:Bush
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Basic steps we should take right away
Posted by: Krotos
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Posted by: Michelle on May 16, 2006 9:17 AM
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That weird faith in a particularly Western way of seeing the world, in the truth of a stunted way of relating to the world.
These monotheistic religions are one side of the western cultural coin. Rationalism is the other. Ugly, disconnected stuff either way.
So now this rationalist wants to evangelize just like the Christians do. Great. All these people are arrogantly trying to spiritually coerce other people toward their "truth," apparently unaware (all of them) that they don't have the first clue about the core flaws in their way of perceiving the world.
Between these people and the New Age creepy folks, it's getting harder to remember that stunted Euro-centric worldviews do not define the spiritual landscape. But I remember.
» and a PS
Posted by: Michelle
» Curious...how did a philsophical view become a religion?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» You're just rationalizing
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: rationalism is also a religion
Posted by: IanA
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Posted by: yellow on May 16, 2006 9:22 AM
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Posted by: NoPCZone on May 16, 2006 9:37 AM
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The writings at the core of most faiths are not an omnibus explanation of everything. Nowhere have I ever read in any religious text a claim that all that could be known is contained within. In fact the Bible, central to 3 faiths, states quite the opposite. Just as a person would not use a can opener to change a tire, reasonable people do not use faith texts as a basis for anything but faith.
Third is people who do not hold to a faith, but 'adopt' and use it for their own purposes. This is as old as history. In the Christian Tradition Jesus warned his followers about people who would do such things. The term 'wolves in sheep clothing' comes from this very warning. The same abuse of religion is doubtless true of any faith.
Last, most people are lazy. I would wager that out of 1,000 evangelicals picked at random, easily less than 200 have read the entire New Testament much less the entire Bible. If one were to extent the survey to see if they have investigated other faiths first-hand, the number would be very small. Most fire breathing religious right supporters have ben hand-fed and have largely second-hand knowledge of their primary texts.
Just because many ill-led, ill-read, and duped people have done stupid things in the name of a faith or god does not condemn the faith that was misused. Much of what is good and right in our society and world is a direct product of the faith that the people who made the changes followed. That tells me it is of value.
» Blame the People...that's easy...Blaming Dogma takes work and research
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Blame the People...that's easy...Blaming Dogma takes work and research
Posted by: NoPCZone
» More rationalizing
Posted by: Moonray
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Posted by: celinaa on May 16, 2006 9:47 AM
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"The End of Faith", not every faith is born equal. It's different to have faith in your doctor or in the team who designed the plane you are travelling than in any mental process, name it god or whatever you want.
"getting rid of all forms of faith" faith in personal mental process (name them god or any other name: energy, people united, gaia) and religion are traits evolution gave us. We used to develop faith to be able to follow our leader who decided how to save the flock. The guy who used to think too much was a dinner for predators so faith and religion is in our genes. We can not and we must not get rid of faith, it's evil to do it and it is impossible.
I'm religious, I can't avoid it, so I take care this handicap don't disturb my rationality.
Religion probably is a disease which we will cure in the next centuries if the world we are forging rewards rational behaviour.
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Posted by: cry0fan on May 16, 2006 9:55 AM
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» Mine is..Master (oops) can't say that here
Posted by: jdwismer922
» Yeah, death is not a disease that can be cured.
Posted by: Sojourner
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Posted by: Sojourner on May 16, 2006 10:05 AM
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However, now that physics has to deal with unobservable entities (quarks, etc.) it finds it necessary to operate within some of the same problems associated with faith: "What do I call what I have just observed?"
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Posted by: rayo on May 16, 2006 10:09 AM
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While I have my own problems with the uses of religion, we should remember that, as social, cultural, and historical discourses, religion and secular humanism can constitute both a response to or the re-enforcement of normativity.
» Yeah, 'Do as I say, not as I do' afflicts all ideologies.
Posted by: Sojourner
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Posted by: NoPCZone on May 16, 2006 10:14 AM
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Dogma is dogma--be it atheist, agnostic, deist, jewish, muslim, christian, wiccan, whatever. If faith is and should be personal & private then the lack thereof should also be. If someone shows up at an organizing event for an environmental concern they do not deserve to be subjected to a diatribe on the evils of their faith in official or casual conversation. People who do this are just reducing their numbers and hurting their cause.
The fact is that there is room in the tent for everyone who will be tolerant of others who will reciprocate. There is a place for discussions and arguments of faith/belief/spirituality, but that is not in the mainstream arena of politics in most cases.
If you are an atheist-- good for you. If you are a christian-- good for you. If you are jewish-- good for you. If you are a wiccan-good for you. Now let's drop the dogma and get on with the issues of our community, nation and world. A group of diverse people who don't spend their time and energy devouring each other can find a lot of common ground and accomplish much.
» RE: Intolerance by those preaching tolerance
Posted by: ezilla
» RE: Intolerance by those preaching tolerance
Posted by: IanA
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Posted by: pdxlinuxchix on May 16, 2006 10:32 AM
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There is nothing wrong with believing in god, per se. There is nothing wrong with believing that Jesus taught that humans can and should live together with compassion. Hell, there's nothing inherently wrong with believing that one day you will spend eternity next to Jesus someplace. The problem comes when folks insist that these non-provable assertions are universally true. I am an ex-Christian and I know--don't think but know--that to be true to the spirit of what is in the Bible one must have a certain level of intolerance. It is built into the framework. Christianity makes no bones about the matter, it considers itself the One True Way and while Christians can be tolerant of other religions, at the end of the day the Bible says what it says; if you believe that God sent Jesus for the forgiveness of sins (and if you don't, are you a Christian?) and that only through accepting Jesus can you be forgiven (and again, there's really no escaping that, there's no wiggle room) then it is an inescapable conclusion that those who do not accept Jesus will pay the price for that non-acceptance. Now, you may recoil at that suggestion but if you are Christian and honest about your religion, you end up having to admit that that *is* what your religion teaches.
Given this, why should the rest of us be silent? What benefit accrues to society by our being complicit in maintaining a fiction with no more empirical veracity than the Easter Bunny or Santa Claus? There are implications to the religiosity of our nation, folks, I'll lay out three interesting stats:
1> In the US, fewer people know about Darwinian theory than in any other major industrialized nation. In fact, in order to find a population where as few people know the basics of Darwinian as in the States you have to look at nations like Bulgaria and Slovenia. In school systems across this country, people are clamoring to have religion taught in biology class.
2> In the US, we have the second highest infant mortality rate of any major industrialized nation. Only Latvia does worse than we do on that measure.
3> The US also has the highest teen pregnancy rate in the industrialized world.
Now, what does that have to do with religion? Everything. Because we keep silent, religion gets taught in biology classes dressed up as 'intelligent design'. Because of religion we hold to this outmoded way of dealing with pregnancy which ends up leading to women *not* having prenatal care that is demonstrable in saving lives. Because of religion we teach abstinence instead of giving children *good*, whole-picture sex education. I'm not suggesting that religion is the *only* cause of items 2 and 3 but we delude ourselves if we say that it isn't a cause.
Sam Harris, whatever flaws he has in presentation, has the courage to break the rules and start the dialog of saying "if you want your religious beliefs translated to public policy, the rest of us have an obligation to challenge you to demonstrate that your religious beliefs have some kind of high correspondence mapping to the real world".
» Exactly right
Posted by: Moonray
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Posted by: Sojourner on May 16, 2006 10:36 AM
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My only problem with organized religion is that, as with everything else, it can be peddled as promising to do something for you. Yet the message of all the great religions is that it is up to us to do something. Jesus’ golden rule is found in them all. Do to them as you would have them do to you. Treat others as you wish to be treated. If you had life to live over again would you want to do again what you are now doing?
I understand communal worship as an opportunity to gather to wish each other and all living things well. Kant taught us that the one guaranteed good is goodwill. That’s a faith worth keeping.
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Posted by: Saitia on May 16, 2006 10:38 AM
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The religion of the spirit requires only unity of experience— uniformity of destiny— making full allowance for diversity of belief. The religion of the spirit requires only uniformity of insight, not uniformity of viewpoint and outlook. The religion of the spirit does not demand uniformity of intellectual views, only unity of spirit feeling.
» New Age nonsense
Posted by: Moonray
» Old age nonsense
Posted by: Sojourner
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Posted by: radnar on May 16, 2006 10:53 AM
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This article has raised more hatred than almost anything I have read on Alternet for several years. People! Let's chill out here, please.
Mr. Harris raises some very good points and I don't believe that he is directly attacking anyone. I don't believe everything he says but that is my right. I certainly don't believe everything many Theists say either but that is also my right.
I do believe that I am no better than anyone else but that no one is any better than I am. We are truly equal in the only way that matters. Here and Now. We are all equal because we are all going to die sometime. We are no better AND no worse than anything on this world or anyother because we are going to end, even the Sun and all of the stars. What happens afterwards is a matter of personal belief and all sorts of tradegy has happened because of those beliefs.
Here and Now, let's let people have their own opinions.
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Posted by: ZPaul on May 16, 2006 11:02 AM
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"Sam Harris .... practices Zen meditation and believes in the value of mystical experiences."
From Webster´s Third New International Dictionary:
mystical: having a spiritual meaning, existence, reality, or comparable value that is neither apparent to the senses nor obvious to the intelligence: relating to such a value: of, resulting from, or manifesting an individual´s direct or intimate knowledge of or communion with God(as through contemplation, vision, an inner light),
mysticism: the experience of mystical union or direct communion with ultimate reality reported by mystics: a theory of mystical knowledge: the doctrine or belief that direct knowledge of God, of spiritual truth, of ultimate reality, or comparable matters is attainable through immediate ituition, insight, or illumination and in a way differing from ordinary sense perception or ratiocination.
.......Which dictionary does Sam Harris use?
» RE: "The Value of Mystical Experiences" - Sam Harris is a Believer
Posted by: mamawheelie
» RE: "The Value of Mystical Experiences" - Quote from Main text
Posted by: mamawheelie
» RE: "The Value of Mystical Experiences" - Sam Harris is a Believer
Posted by: ZPaul
» ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Posted by: decembrist
» RE: ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Posted by: ZPaul
» RE: "The Value of Mystical Experiences" - Sam Harris is a Believer
Posted by: Dan Metcalf
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Posted by: zooeyhall on May 16, 2006 11:06 AM
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Passivity---people out here accept loss of economic power, bullying by corporations, concentration of wealth in the hands of the few, loss of jobs, environmental degradation, etc.---by basically re-assuring themselves that it is "God's will" or that "God will fix it all someday"
or conversely--
Some use it as a justification for agressiveness and economic inequality i.e. "I got my reward for believing in Jesus and following his ways. The poor are poor because their faith wasn't as strong as mine, etc. etc. I lived God's life and that is why I now have my McMansion and a million $$$ in the bank".
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Posted by: ezilla on May 16, 2006 11:08 AM
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White
Female
Liberal
Femminist
Atheist
Wife
American
College Graduate
etc.
Do you know me now?
Every one of those words has built in connotations. But honestly, i could list labels all day and you still wouldn't really know me, would you?
Atheist - would you know I was raised Christian? Work for a Christian organization?
American - would you know I spent my formative years on a Canadian island?
Femminist - no I don't spend my free time burning bras and hating men.
Labels are stereotypes - based in a nugget of truth, certainly, but hardly difinitive of any single person. Religious labels are particularly loaded. They are used to unite and to divide. I certainly don't agree with this article 100%, but my grain of salt and I prefer to open-mindedly entertain a differing opinion and take something away from the discussion.
No matter the literal words used, I get the feeling the author agrees that that whatever your religious label, we must all identify first as Human. All other labels are both secondary and tertiary. If I treat you as human first, catholic second, religion becomes a non-issue.
You can't control the actions of others, but you can control yourself.
» RE: The Problems Caused by Labels
Posted by: mamawheelie
» RE: The Problems Caused by Labels
Posted by: ezilla
» RE: mick3
Posted by: solrev
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Posted by: Roverton on May 16, 2006 11:54 AM
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Comparing religion to spirituality is ignorance.
Most people attacking the ancient practices within the "New Age" have had no extensive experience in those areas.
Peripheral at best.
PRE-JUDICED. Judged in advance of data.
NO EXPERIENCE, NO REAL RESEARCH = IGNORACE. Works the same on any topic.
I'm not religious. I try to be spiritual. The concept that we are connected by something more than just a philosophy.
A bonding.
No names in particular, but some of these kind and loving "Rational" posts have the derisive humor of a scared and cruel litttle child.
That's the sort of "Rational Kindness" that only a spiritual person could drive cross country with.
Religion runs on that very system. No experince, so just believe.
PS: How can anyone with a scientific mindset believe that telling a world to ditch their religious beliefs will just work? Why hasn't it yet? A rude awakening in the form of Armaggeddon might just, but then it's too late. Academia is understandably wounded by a world that no longer values their work. But bitterness is creeping out and that alone can scare droves of potential believer away.
Not rational.
FACT.
Humanity will continue to explore concepts. We jusrt simply will. Aethism has to come up with more than mockery to deter us from experimenting with other ways of living.
» "The gods we worship write their names on our faces." --RW Emerson
Posted by: Sojourner
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Posted by: mousiedung on May 16, 2006 12:15 PM
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I don't care how the universe got here, but I'd like to know why the universe got here. Neither science nor theology has a plausible answer to that one.
As far as religious tolerance goes, I understand the everyone in the US has a constitutional right to believe in whatever they want to. However, I have no constitutional obligation to believe they are sane.
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Posted by: LMNOP on May 16, 2006 12:17 PM
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Here are the types of ideas of evidence based thinkers:
(1) When evidence is incontovertible, we have proof and we proceed with assurance. We know we are right and are justified in that.
(2) When evidence is suggestive or supportive but does not exclude other possibilities, we have belief and we proceed with caution knowing that we are making an educated guess.
(3) When there is no evidence for a proposition, or there is insufficient evidence to justify belief, we are undecided and we don't act at all unless we must. If we must act, we know that we are guessing wildly.
Now, here's how faith based thinking works:
You are in category three - no evidence except fallacious arguments and an apocryphal source book - just pure wild guessing, but you choose to be in category one, so you just forget that you are unsure and make yourself certain by refusing to consider the matter again. Anything that threatens that reverie is considered the devil and to be ignored.
Then, if you're an evangelical in the mold of the American movement, you impose your belief system by law and by threat of force onto people who have not taken the Kool-Aid with you and consider your rules arbitrary and counterproductive.
Isn't that nice.
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Posted by: johnwilkins1672 on May 16, 2006 12:19 PM
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I also doubt that rationality would bring us peace. the fact is that people who are rational can have a variety of perspectives, and be as angry and as certain as individuals who are irrational. There is no necessary connection between rationality and, say, empathy.
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Posted by: jpinder on May 16, 2006 12:27 PM
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BTW Here is something menacing that G. Bush senior stated in an interview:
“No, I don't know that atheists should be considered as citizens, nor should they be considered patriots. This is one nation under God.”
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Posted by: johngary66 on May 16, 2006 12:39 PM
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Posted by: American Reflections on May 16, 2006 12:38 PM
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If you believe there is no God, that is certainly your right, just as my belief that there is a God is my right. My own belief system is not based on, nor is it subject to, approval from persons or religious institutions that disagree with me.
I was raised in an evangelical religion, and as I look back on it, I see a great deal of harm in the manner in which it was presented to me as a child. Yet, now, as I close in on my 70th year on this planet, I look back and also see a great deal of good. It was from my religious training that I learned everything that has been good in my life, and which I believe is the good in this world, those things being honesty, respect for all living things, compassion for those who are suffering or in need, tolerance, and justice. And I believe that anything that flies in the face of common human decency is wrong. At least, it is wrong for me.
I don't get much involved with dogma because that is a man-made type of prejudice that denies the right of the individual to think for theirself. Where people like Pat Robertson or Jerry Falwell are concerned, I see them as the worst of the worst, making their fortunes from the fear of other people. And in considering the supposed religious conversion of George Bush who claims that God is leading him....whispering in his ear, so to speak...I have to say that the God I believe in would most likely not choose a chronic liar to represent Him.
In reading the comments on this forum, I am reminded of something I read many years ago, and in quoting it, I am going to change it to fit this debate. I think it is a quote by Somerset Maugham...but it could have been someone else, and it was focused on the the question of whether or not we are alone in this universe. As I recall, he said, "Sometimes I think we are alone in thie universe, and sometimes I think we are not. Either way, the concept is mind-boggling." That can easily be changed to reflect the issue of whether of not there is a God. Sometimes I believe there is a God, and sometimes I question it, but either way it is a concept that boggles the mind.
I choose to believe that God exists, although I'm not sure what form He takes. Mankind has always interpreted the world around him according to his understanding of the things he experienced. The more primitive his understanding, the more primitive were his gods, i.e. "rain gods, gods of wind, sun gods and thunder gods." Back in the 1970s, a writer by the name of Erik Von Danniken (sp?) published a couple of books that suggested God was a spaceman. I read them, and much of what he said made sense to me. Whatever phenomena was designated as "God," it seems always to have come from the sky. And exerpts from the Bible can be easily be defined as beings from other planets, come to earth in chariots of fire. For the moment, dispense with your skepticism and consider that there may be a basis for that. If God is an alien being who has visited earth, bringing with him evidence of a highly developed knowledge, it seems natural that primitive man would have viewed this being as "God." If there is any truth to this does this take away from the belief that there is a God? Of course not. It simply changes the mysticism surrounding the God concept and forces it into a more understandable belief system, yet it remains unprovable.
For whatever may be my needs, I have chosen my beliefs. The rest of the world must choose theirs. And whatever those choices may be, let us hope for acceptance and tolerance of the beliefs of others.
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Posted by: robmikejas on May 16, 2006 12:52 PM
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Posted by: rbohan on May 16, 2006 3:35 AM
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You want to be an atheist, be an atheist. But don't present your nasty bigotry and smarmy arrogance as if it were "enlightened thinking".
Sheesh...with people like Sam spouting this sort of mean-spirited baloney, it's no wonder the rest of America can't stand us liberals. Half my time in activism is spent trying to convince moderates that we aren't all as condescending and arrogant as Sam and his ilk.
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: kick
» Sam's right, but saying so is bad politics.
Posted by: medstudgeek
» RE: Sam's right, but saying so is bad politics.
Posted by: kick
» RE: Sam's right, but saying so is bad politics.
Posted by: rbohan
» RE: Sam's right, but saying so is bad politics.
Posted by: jontv
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: douglashoyt
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: rbohan
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: Llama11
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: rbohan
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: hms2004
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: Llama11
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: model_consumer
» Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: rbohan
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: NYRugby
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: rbohan
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: NYRugby
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: rbohan
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: djtyg
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: djtyg
» Silly argument
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: Silly argument
Posted by: Llama11
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: djtyg
» RE: Well, if the shoe fits . . .
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: quissy
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: Wacre
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: Aim
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: taxidave
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: taxidave
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: taxidave
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: rbohan
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: hms2004
» RE: This is the sort of claptrap that makes all of us liberals seem like arrogant snots
Posted by: jbsequoia
» rbohan is not liberal at all
Posted by: monkopotamus
» RE: rbohan is not liberal at all
Posted by: rbohan
» Well, so much for rationalism
Posted by: afrothetics
» RE: Well, so much for rationalism
Posted by: rbohan
» RE: Well, so much for rationalism ye of little faith
Posted by: solrev
» Another Poor Choice from Alternet...
Posted by: CatDad
» Why are you arguing with this guy?
Posted by: LMNOP
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Posted by: janten on May 16, 2006 3:39 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What is that supposed to mean? Islam means submission and it means the peace one experiences when one submits completely to the will of Allah/God, and Allah can be legitimately described as the unity or oneness of all beings. This describes the very essence of Islam and everything else is commentary that has been hung on this religion by people with their own political agendas.
The same is true of Christianity and Judaism. What Sam Harris is talking about, and should be clear about, is that organized religion is what has caused so many problems, arguably more bad deeds than good. Harris, himself, practices meditation. I do, too. For millennia people have done so. And some have "come back" from interesting meditative experiences through which they have transcended ordinary experiences of life -- they have had experiences "outside the box" -- and they have reported as best they could on what they experienced. Others took those reports, their interpretations of them, and built religions around them. Most often these builders of religions have had various political agendas and few or no transcendent experiences of their own. So they have created and codified rituals, rules and beliefs to follow and to impose on others. They tell others what to do and what not to do, what to believe and what not to believe, and how much to pay.
The Truth of us all being in this life together, the Truth of all that we have in common, the Truth of the Oneness that unites us, the Truth that can be found for one's self through meditation and other genuine spiritual practices is the only basis for real religion. Re-ligion means a re-uniting, a re-binding with this Truth, which some name God or Allah. This is what religion is really about. And, when realized, this Truth can only result in goodness. It is only when people submit to their own egos, to their own small selves, and then try to impose their egoic agendas on others in the name of religion that the troubles begin, and continue, and grow.
The ideal of religion is that it -- this re-binding in unity -- is and can be achieved only through one's own individual transcendent or mystical experiences. Organized religions are, by definition and design, anti-individual and, ironically, anti-religion. Individualism can't be organized. The interesting paradox, though, is that mystical unity is an individual path that can best be accomplished in groups! And that, too, is part of the mystery of life.
Mystical experience is real. It is different from logical reasoning which is of the realm of the mind, yet the two are united. The way this is expressed in the Sufi tradition I am familiar with is that "the mind is the surface of the heart and the heart is the depth of the mind" and it is recognized that both the mind and the heart represent ways of knowing and understanding, as well as that neither way alone is complete but that both ways working together harmoniously can bring one complete understanding and wisdom, and a richer, fuller life of peace.
» there is a way...
Posted by: Lauren
» RE: Organized problems
Posted by: jpinder
Comments are closed-
Posted by: redstarwraith on May 16, 2006 3:58 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And another thing. It's easy to say that Islam is not a religion of peace but it's quite another task to look at this accusation historically. As anyone with an ounce of historical background should be able to tell you, Islam brought a marked improvement in the living conditions in the Arabian penninsula and ended centuries of barbarism. Muslim conquerors typically showed far more tolerance to their vanquished than did Christians. . .but all this is a matter of record. The most important fact is that Christianity and Islam and Judaism have had more years of peaceful coexistence than of war. Religion is not the problem. Religious intolerance is.
» RE: Overlooked point
Posted by: ZPaul
» Overlooked rebuttal to the Overlooked point...
Posted by: NYRugby
» Sam never said...
Posted by: aonghus36
» try reading more carefully?
Posted by: monkopotamus
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Poederbach on May 16, 2006 4:00 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What needs to happen is to make everybody fearless by having a mind of your own. Only robots have no mind of their own. Reading Thomas Pain's The Age of Reason (1794) is a good start. More then 200 years ago this American had a mind of his own.
The second observation is that many people are kept ignorant about the facts of live by religions, it would hurt the religions if the people were knowledgeable or even worse had imagination. That would scare the hell out of religions and diminish their power.
Third observation, all politics are religious based and politics have to do with power (and money)
So I agree, end all religions
TomTom, Fearless Navigator
» RE: Fear
Posted by: hagwind
» Anti-religion often is simply ignorance of religion.
Posted by: Sojourner
Comments are closed-
Posted by: riffraff2001 on May 16, 2006 4:07 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» Use the Vatican reaction to the DaVinci Code as a guide to the truth...
Posted by: SeverelyJaded
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Lincoln fan on May 16, 2006 4:18 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» no, the BEST religion is one of personal experience
Posted by: Lauren
Comments are closed-
Posted by: riffraff2001 on May 16, 2006 4:23 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» RE: I'd also like to respond to people of faith by saying...
Posted by: Krotos
» see the response below...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» Logically speaking....
Posted by: Longdream
» RE: I'd also like to respond to people of faith by saying...
Posted by: douglashoyt
» god is an experience
Posted by: Lauren
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ChristopherLL on May 16, 2006 4:32 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» YES!
Posted by: Paul D
» RE: YES!
Posted by: Lauren
» NO!
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: NO!
Posted by: ChristopherLL
» Also...
Posted by: aonghus36
» ChristopherLL you are starting what religion has mastered
Posted by: jpinder
» RE: ChristopherLL you are starting what religion has mastered
Posted by: ChristopherLL
» YES, YES, YES
Posted by: woodford54
Comments are closed-
Posted by: greentime on May 16, 2006 4:36 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We need a religion that supports sustainability and the truths of humanity. One that includes women, and children and their wisdom. One that is inclusive, not exclusionary and punishing of those who are good but different from the male models.
So far, I haven't found one among the offerings.
» RE: We need a religion (or values) that will
Posted by: Krotos
» RE: We need a religion (or values) that will
Posted by: greentime
» RE: We need a religion (or values) that will
Posted by: Krotos
» Have you ever looked at the Native American religions?
Posted by: Lauren
» RE: Have you ever looked at the Native American religions?
Posted by: ChristopherLL
Comments are closed-
Posted by: mazel on May 16, 2006 4:38 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» RE: a better world
Posted by: greentime
Comments are closed-
Posted by: solrev on May 16, 2006 4:46 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» HUH?
Posted by: Paul D
» RE: HUH?
Posted by: Saitia
» RE: HUH? re read
Posted by: solrev
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Krotos on May 16, 2006 4:52 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There can be little dispute that certain forms of religion, such as fundamentalist Islam and fundamentalist Christianity, are on the whole very bad things. But I disagree that we should aim for getting rid of all forms of faith. Mere belief in a deity or afterlife is arational or non-rational, since neither the existence nor nonexistence of these can be proven (thus atheists are also operating on faith!). The problems seem to come when you start adding on a lot of other anti-rational baggage that grossly conflicts with our empirical, scientific understanding of how the world works, such as the belief that the world was created 6,000 years ago or that somebody once turned water into wine.
I do not believe, as the interviewee appears to, that having faith necessarily means that you also have to accept myths and fairy tales as truth.
-K.Ai.-
» actually...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: actually...
Posted by: Krotos
» hahaha
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: hahaha
Posted by: Krotos
» RE: hahaha
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: hahaha
Posted by: Krotos
» RE: hahaha
Posted by: rbohan
» Again hahaha
Posted by: riffraff2001
» come again?
Posted by: Spot
» RE: come again?
Posted by: Krotos
» Let's simplify this arguement...
Posted by: aussidawg
Comments are closed-
Posted by: boing007 on May 16, 2006 4:53 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sorry, chum, there would be no religion without the secular humanism that informed it.
» Exemplary rebuttal boing007
Posted by: jpinder
Comments are closed-
Posted by: brunowe on May 16, 2006 4:58 AM
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» disparragement? Critical is more like it.
Posted by: decembrist
Comments are closed-
Posted by: riffraff2001 on May 16, 2006 4:59 AM
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» RE: You don't need drugs either...
Posted by: kick
» RE: You don't need drugs either...
Posted by: griggsy
Comments are closed-
Posted by: kick on May 16, 2006 5:04 AM
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» RE: Peace thru love peace thru war
Posted by: solrev
Comments are closed-
Posted by: medstudgeek on May 16, 2006 5:08 AM
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Besides, as the first commenter said, stuff like this gives the Repugs ammunition. "Oh, see, the liberals hate people of faith" blah blah blah. "I will stand up for the rights of the believing people of America" blah blah blah. And then we have four more years of warfare, environmental destruction, etc.
I think we need to steal religion back from the Repugs. Like it or not, America is a Christian country in the sense that most Americans are Christians. (I don't like it.) Look, Jesus said you were supposed to take care of the poor and needy. How on earth tax cuts for the rich is Christian is beyond me. (Anyone ever seen Ted Baehr's Movieguide?) At the very least the Nazarene is with us on economic issues, and probably on guns too. (Turn the other cheek...) Where does the Bible mention abortion? But hey, Jim Wallis said it better than me.
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Moonray on May 16, 2006 5:13 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The foolish laws and policies passed as a result of religious coercion -- such as bans on certain medications, early abortions and even the sale of sex toys in some states (!!!) -- do enormous harm to our society. For generations children have been warped and psychologically damaged by these weird beliefs.
Let's demand that tax codes be rewritten to ensure religious groups pay taxes like anyone else. And, no, those tax breaks are not in the Constitution. They were inserted into our laws by courts that caved to pressure from the church mafia.
Comments are closed-
Posted by: SDres11 on May 16, 2006 5:15 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» fantastic idea, but how?
Posted by: Lauren
» RE: How about we unite the tolerant religious people with non-religious people for a change ?
Posted by: ConnecttheDots
Comments are closed-
Posted by: riffraff2001 on May 16, 2006 5:18 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» RE: A brief history of religion...
Posted by: Spot
Comments are closed-
Posted by: solrev on May 16, 2006 5:25 AM
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: goldgrif on May 16, 2006 5:31 AM
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I have suffered for my religion, been beaten stabbed and shot at. There are people who hold their holy books close to their chest and their guns and knives as close if not closer.
I no longer trust anyone from outside my faith and neither do my kids, and there is no reason for me to. I have seen how religious americans are, and though I do not blame all people of faiths outside mine, I dont trust. And it is the relgions fault for fostering the idea of violence and hate. And the inability of humans to use their intelligence.
Blessed BE.
» Sorry but...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: Sorry but...
Posted by: aonghus36
» RE: Sorry but...
Posted by: redjenny
» true practice of religion
Posted by: decembrist
» RE: True religion us atheists do not have one
Posted by: solrev
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Mutternich on May 16, 2006 5:33 AM
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: metamind on May 16, 2006 5:38 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Virtue is different than religion. You don't need to believe in virtue in order to discover virtue. You can try it out and discover the results you get. Go ahead and "love your neighbor" and see what happens. Go ahead and practice tolerance, truthfulness, honesty and compassion. You'll get your own results which you can use to further refine your behavior and your beliefs.
Everyone has beliefs. The question becomes one of "are you in a spell?" A spell is a web of belief which restricts your thinking about life, keeping you from possibilities which might expand your potential to create virtue. We see this in religion throughout history.
Poverty, population and prejudice are three issues which religion has failed to deal with in a rational, loving and compassionate manner. That's a broad generalization and there may be a religion which does deal with thm, but I'm unaware of what it might be so please tell me. As Jesus said, "Judge by the fruits." ( results ) The fruits of religion have often resulted in increases in poverty, population and prejudice. These are unvirtuous results. We should be seeking an end to poverty, a population in balance with nature and the ecosystem, and a reduction in the strength and acceptability of prejudice.
To deal with poverty we need to deal with the economic system, population issues and social/religous/economic prejudices. One of the basic problems is the prejudice of
"Some people are better than others" which is often re-inforced by religious belief. Religious belief is often used to justify overpopulation, poverty and economic oppression.
Simply increasing the amount of positive reinforcement whenever someone shows virtue would make a difference.
Honesty is a virtue. Let's tell the honest truth about religion
and support those people who do this. That's a good place to start in my opinion.
Steve Moyer
Candidate for U.S. Senate (VT)
http://stevemoyer.us
Think virtue. Teach virtue. Live virtue
Lightheartedness Assertiveness Faithfulness Kindness Respect Caring Flexibility Love Responsibility Cleanliness Forgiveness Reverence Compassion Friendliness Mercy Self-discipline Confidence Generosity Moderation Service Consideration Gentleness Modesty Steadfastness Courage Helpfulness Obedience Tact Courtesy Honesty Orderliness Thankfulness Creativity Honor Patience Tolerance Detachment Humility Peacefulness Trust Determination Idealism Prayerfulness Trustworthiness Enthusiasm Joyfulness Purposefulness Truthfulness Excellence Justice Reliability Unity.
» Virtue is an incredibly vague term
Posted by: riffraff2001
» population as a religious issue
Posted by: Lauren
» population as a religious issue
Posted by: Lauren
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ladybellringerm on May 16, 2006 5:45 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Peace.
» Surely, you jest
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: I think you jest...
Posted by: aonghus36
» Merely citing . . .
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: Merely citing . . .
Posted by: aonghus36
» RE: Oops! Excuse me . . .
Posted by: Moonray
Comments are closed-
Posted by: kenhymes on May 16, 2006 5:51 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Where will the re-education classes be held, Sam? Starbucks? Or do you have a more secure facility in mind?
This is not liberalism or enlightenment thinking, it's Stalinism.
What are you suggesting, a committee of scientists (that impartial, noble bunch who have brought us thalidomide, napalm, the bomb, Chernobyl, Bhopal, eugenics, electric shock therapy, and forced medication of children) to decide whose beliefs pass muster?
Shall we install Mysticism Detectors in airports?
Shall we have little children chant in unison: "I am a chemical accident! When I die I'm a rotting corpse and nothing more! Yaaaaay, rationalism!!" ?
But see, the problem is, this is a democracy. It's not up to Jerry Falwell or Sam Harris to tell me what to believe about the universe or about morality. I believe in the Holy Spirit, and I believe in social justice. There are tens of millions like me in the USA.
Every time you spout this hateful garbage, Sam, you drive one more nail in the coffin of a successful coalition to restore pluralism and democracy and the rule of law in this country. but I don't think you really care about that. You want to win, and having watched you speak a number of times, I think deep down what you want to do is hurt people.
Who was down in New Orleans after the flood? The Government took a vacation. ANSWER and Move On typed away at their computers. The churches (many of whose ideology I totally disagree with) were, and are, out in force, feeding people, clothing people, housing people.
Obviously, a great deal of damage is being done in the name of religion in this world. And in the name of democracy. And in the name of globalization and "economic progress." And in the name of "research."
Because people lie, and use excuses for their destructive behavior. It's one thing to see through the lies and hold people accountable, to establish a common purpose in commonly held institutions. It's another thing to say, "Well, science, you've screwed up too many times, so we're getting rid of you." Or, "Sorry, most of the world's population, your religious leaders have lied too many times for their own nefarious purposes, so you need to stop believing in God."
If Christianity IS the Inquisition... then Science IS Hiroshima... the United States IS slavery... Marxism IS a Stalinist prison camp.
The left is wasting much too much on this issue. Religion DOES NOT CONTROL AMERICA. RICH PEOPLE DO. THis whole topic is a very useful distraction, and a wedge being used to drive people away from the left.
Good going, Sam.
» You just don't get it
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: Ummm, yeah, sure
Posted by: tussinup
» RE: Ummm, yeah, sure
Posted by: redjenny
» RE: Ummm, yeah, sure
Posted by: schnoggi
» Sarcasm aside ...
Posted by: AdamSelene40
Comments are closed-
Posted by: riffraff2001 on May 16, 2006 5:55 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» Right on!
Posted by: Moonray
» I must disagree
Posted by: ezilla
Comments are closed-
Posted by: rsaxto on May 16, 2006 5:57 AM
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: tussinup on May 16, 2006 6:06 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And could we puh-leeeze not have any more of the racist "clash of civilizations" crap? I don't claim to understand Islam or Islamic culture, but I am willing to listen to Muslims and let my understanding grow through dialogue. Meanwhile, Sam Harris and millions of little Sam Harris's are walking around saying "They ain't like us. We've got us a clash of civilizations here." They usually base that statement on a flash of inspiration they received (O, That rationalism!) after reading a newspaper article based on a "scholarly paper" funded by the Hoover Institution.
» Good grief people!
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: Smug new age self aggrandizement.
Posted by: schnoggi
» RE: Smug new age self aggrandizement.
Posted by: tussinup
» RE: Smug new age self aggrandizement.
Posted by: kick
» RE: Smug new age self aggrandizement.
Posted by: Saitia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: schnoggi on May 16, 2006 6:11 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
if there is a "God", "he" must exist so far outside of time and narratives, that "he" doesn't even know we are here. The whole notion that "he" needs our help to create some preferred outcome is just incredibly stupid.
Religions are supposedly about some connection to the divine, but they generally boil down to assurances about what's going to happen to your stupid little ego for eternity. I don't think we need legislation to keep people from practicing them, but boy am I glad to be alive at a point when saying you're a "Christian" (oh btw "Christianity" is descended from the people who exterminated Christ's actual followers, I'm just saying...total heresy from the get go) marks you as a muttering dangerous simpleton rather than some upstanding citizen.
when will we ever have a politician with the balls to stand up and say what bullshit it all is...on that day the world will begin to move towards real light at lonnnng last.
btw: Ken's Guide to the Bible: short and sweet, deliciously mean.
» RE: the universe doesn't require your efforts
Posted by: schnoggi
Comments are closed-
Posted by: schnoggi on May 16, 2006 6:22 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
more lazy thinking. Gd loves you for being a goldfish.
» RE: end justifies means?
Posted by: russianblue1
Comments are closed-
Posted by: vojak on May 16, 2006 6:39 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It would be great if we could all hammer out our own philosophies, but I think that is asking too much of the average person who is busy with the tasks of daily life and has no use for such creative ponderings. Besides, looking to one's own intellect, in many people's minds, runs counter to the belief that spiritual truths are larger than the thoughts of any one person.
I don't believe it is generally possible to convince people to be rational about religion. That is like trying to convince a Democrat that she should become a Republican, or the reverse scenario. It is possible, however, to teach people to be reasonable and respectful with people who do not share their beliefs. To live and let live. As Thomas Jefferson once said "...it does no injury to me for my neighbor to say there are twenty gods or no God. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg." (notes on Virginia, 1782)
Finally, I would like to point out that given the many unknownable aspects of our universe and its origins, atheism is just as dogmatic as religions that are convinced God exists. Really, the only justifiable rational stance is agnosticism.
» Religion does pick our pocket!
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: eligion does pick our pocket!
Posted by: Michael Robin
» RE: Comments
Posted by: aussidawg
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Jasonix on May 16, 2006 6:54 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But I've noticed that people create evil "religions" out of political ideology, economic theory, corporate policies, multi-level marketing, etc. The notion of a personal God isn't necessary for people to be collectively bad. If anyone knows how to defeat human evil, let me know.
» RE: Non-theistic religion is still religion
Posted by: IanA
Comments are closed-
Posted by: karyse on May 16, 2006 6:54 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The comment seciton of this article is the proof that religion, spirituality, and lack of reason is responsible for hate, fear, and loathing.
Atheism is living without belief in god; to the monotheists in this crowd -- not to worry, I only believe in one less god than you do.
» RE: Atheism is not a thing
Posted by: Jasonix
Comments are closed-
Posted by: metamind on May 16, 2006 6:57 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No, of course not. Should you have faith in the existence of truth? Yes, of course you should. This kind of faith empowers you to seek the truth and possibly find it. If you have faith that "there is no truth" then you will neither seek it nor find it. If faith in God helps you find things of value in your life then it is a good thing. If faith in God make you do crazy things, then it is a bad thing. But faith in the truth is a good thing because it produces good results. Faith in virtue is a good thing because if produces more virtue. Faith in the goodness of humanity is a good thing because people will respond well to it. Faith in the evil nature of humanity is a bad thing because people will prove you are correct.
Faith in righteousness is a good thing because it produces good results; it lets you know the difference between good and evil.
Faith in positive things yields positive results. Faith in negative things yields negative results. The proper use of faith is to believe in the positive potential of yourself, other people and the entire universe.
Therefore, it is possible that faith in the existence of God is a positive thing. Judge by the fruits.
Steve Moyer
http://stevemoyer.us
» Again sorry...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» Sizzlin' rant!
Posted by: Michael Robin
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ZPaul on May 16, 2006 7:00 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If my neighbor wants to worship Mount Kilamanjaro and believes it´s the center of the universe, it´s fine with me, until he or she starts telling me it´s what I have to believe, too. I feel pretty much the same about "The Anti-God Squad"...
» RE: The Agnostic and the AGS
Posted by: mysticpal
» RE: The Agnostic and the AGS
Posted by: redjenny
Comments are closed-
Posted by: O.B.Server on May 16, 2006 7:00 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» RE: Buddhism and Christianity...attempts that came up short?
Posted by: Jasonix
» of course not
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: right...so it's pointless
Posted by: Jasonix
Comments are closed-
Posted by: secretchief on May 16, 2006 7:18 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
However, I am far from certain that rationality alone will make our world a better place. Many philosophers seem to think that a rational discussion (Habermas for instance) will undoubtedly lead to a universal conclusion.
I do not wish to sound snotty, but I think that if you spend some of your time travelling around the world, you will quickly come to the conclusion that "rational" arguments can take you to many contradictory places. A logical or rational conclusion in Sweden will sound irrational in Alberta, not to speak about Bangladesh.
To make a long story short, I do not think the elimination of religion would mean the end of "irrational" arguments. Religious stupidity/intolerance will be replaced by cultural stupidity/intolerance. I think Erich Fromm was right when he said that our reason is just a tool that tries to validate our gut feelings.
Comments are closed-
Posted by: IanA on May 16, 2006 7:25 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Does God exist because people accept His existence? If nobody new of God would He cease to exist? Is everything in the universe connected and interdependent? Did gravity exist before Newton? Do we need to submit all understanding and belief to some authoritative scientific committee of rational thinkers to have an “approved” basis of belief. And what would be the conclusions on the diversity of definitions on such subjects as time, energy, matter and space. Would we then be restricted hence forth within the parameters defined by a new lot of self righteous people, prophets, organizing our present and future comprehension?
Sorry not enough for me. Since I do not accept that an amoeba must have the capacity to understand the universe in which it exists and that I share, why should I believe that I, Sam Harris or an august bunch of “scientists” are so much further ahead. Their arrogance and a few million years of evolution do not give them any more wisdom to dictate correctness or denial of any belief system.
No ones God started any war or did “more harm than good in the world”, Good and evil is done and defined by people. God does not use religions but people do use God. The International Academy of Humanism represent just another limited belief system organized with power and money for money and power just like any other religious grouping. So, more than I detest “Fundamentalism”, I love tolerance and would suggest that Sam Harris and a few of the commentators above meditate a little more carefully the words of Immanuel Kant’s description of Enlightenment:
“Enlightenment is man’s leaving his self-caused immaturity. Immaturity is the incapacity to use one’s own understanding without the guidance of another. Such immaturity is self-caused if its case is not lack of intelligence, but by lack of determination and courage to use one’s own intelligence without being guided by another. The motto of enlightenment is therefore: Sapere aude! Have courage to use one’s own intelligence!”
It takes wisdom not just intellect to accept that we know far more than we can prove. To condemn extremism is understandable, but to deny all beliefs that do not lend to a limited methodology, that is extreme.
» RE: God is Great-Science is Better- Science is God!
Posted by: djtyg
» RE: God is Great-Science is Better- Science is God!
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo
» A Question
Posted by: errandchild
Comments are closed-
Posted by: hagwind on May 16, 2006 7:29 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you try to critique a belief system by focusing entirely on its texts, you're going to miss a few things. That goes for Christianity, Islam, and Judaism, sure, but also for communism, socialism, feminism, the 12-step program, and all the others I can think of. The excesses of Stalin and the collapse of the Soviet Union do not prove that socialist ideas are worthless. The state hasn't withered away; that doesn't mean we don't have plenty to learn from Marx et al.
Sam Harris makes some valuable points, but some of his analysis is as ahistorical as that of the people who say things like "God said it, I believe it, and that settles it." Honor killings are not unique to Muslim countries. Not so very long ago they were widely sanctioned in Catholic and Protestant countries too. A man could kill his wife or daughter for "dishonoring the family name" and the usual laws didn't apply. (Lynching is a variant: the white woman's honor is restored or protected by killing the black man who supposedly poached on the white man's territory.) Honor killings, along with rape, suttee, witch burnings, making a fetish of female virginity, and a whole bunch of other nasty practices, are a symptom of patriarchal thinking and patriarchal institutions. Sure, the world's major religions are all deeply rooted in patriarchal societies, but sexism seems to do pretty well in secular ones as well, so let's not delude ourselves that "religion" is the only problem.
Harris also doesn't consider the distinct possibility that Islamic extremism has as much to do with the legacy of European (at least nominally Christian) imperialism in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia as it does with the Qur'an. When those 18th-century Americans rebelled against their colonial master, they used the ideas and imagery of their time and place. The 21st-century jihadists are doing likewise.
» RE: Does Harris need a history lesson?
Posted by: jesme
» RE: Does Harris need a history lesson?
Posted by: hagwind
» RE: Does Harris need a history lesson?
Posted by: IanA
» Um-m, the Qur'an doesn't support Islamist extremism.
Posted by: fool-on-the-hill
» RE: Um-m, the Qur'an doesn't support Islamist extremism.
Posted by: redjenny
» It's Even Worse When We Look at Religion's Actions
Posted by: decembrist
Comments are closed-
Posted by: jesme on May 16, 2006 7:31 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So does atheism produce mass murder?
» excuse me
Posted by: riffraff2001
» Exactly...Communism=political power nothing to do with atheism/theism
Posted by: jdwismer922
» ..which is kinda the point, innit?
Posted by: jesme
» RE: The missing question...
Posted by: jdwismer922
Comments are closed-
Posted by: jdwismer922 on May 16, 2006 7:33 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1. Atheists want to abolish all religion
2. Atheists are communists
3. Religious people are all violent vengeful, etc..
4. True Religion is (fill in the blank)
5. Atheism is a religion
6. Hitler was an atheist
7. You can't have morality w/out god
8. Life is meaningless w/out an afterlife
9. Rationalism is New Age Garbage
10. Atheists are synonomous with the Devil
» RE: Atheist here, to raise Awareness level and dispell misinformation from the panicy theists here
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Atheist here, to raise Awareness level and dispell misinformation from the panicy theists here
Posted by: kick
» RE: Atheist here, to raise Awareness level and dispell misinformation from the panicy theists here
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Atheist here, to raise Awareness level and dispell misinformation from the panicy theists here
Posted by: kick
» RE: Atheist here, to raise Awareness level and dispell misinformation from the panicy theists here
Posted by: jdwismer922
» IF it wasn't clear "this is a list of common MISCONCEPTIONS" about atheism...thanks
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Atheist here, to raise Awareness level and dispell misinformation from the panicy theists here
Posted by: laoma
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Posted by: Uncle Tupelo on May 16, 2006 7:37 AM
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When I'm in church singing a hymn or gazing idly at a rushing river or moving through a crowded subway platform, I'm overwhelmed with the sensation -- the innate knowing that we're part of something present, something bigger, something conscious. Compared to the wet warmth of that knowing, your dry cold rationalism seems puny and laughably wrong. If you haven't experienced that oceanic feeling, my sympathies go out to you.
» RE: ationalism...blah
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: ationalism...blah
Posted by: tclaverdure
» RE: ationalism...blah
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo on May 16, 2006 7:37 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I'm in church singing a hymn or gazing idly at a rushing river or moving through a crowded subway platform, I'm overwhelmed with the sensation -- the innate knowing that we're part of something present, something bigger, something conscious. Compared to the wet warmth of that knowing, your dry cold rationalism seems puny and laughably wrong. If you haven't experienced that oceanic feeling, my sympathies go out to you.
» yeah we're part of something bigger...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: yeah we're part of something bigger...
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo
» Ever heard of Bertrand Russell...and the teacup theory?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: ver heard of Bertrand Russell...and the teacup theory?
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo
» RE: yeah we're part of something bigger...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: yeah we're part of something bigger...
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo
» YEAH and I always get goosebumps when I see a hottie...does that make it religious?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: YEAH and I always get goosebumps when I see a hottie...does that make it religious?
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo
» RE: yeah we're part of something bigger...
Posted by: jonesey
» RE: ationalism...blah
Posted by: kick
» RE: ationalism...blah
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo
» do you have anything intelligent to add to this conversation?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» ???
Posted by: jdwismer922
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Posted by: McJulie on May 16, 2006 7:38 AM
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And somebody else will say "amen, brother!"
And then religious liberals get offended. And anti-religious liberals pretend they don't understand how anybody could possibly be offended by being called childish, ignorant, unevolved, prone to violence, and in league with secular devils like James Dobson.
After more than 200 years it still does me no injury for my neighbor to say there are twenty gods or no God. It still neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg.
But it is unhelpful, anti-Constitutional, and also annoying, for my neighbor to say that I must ALSO say there are twenty gods or no God.
» I'm not saying you have to give up religion...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» RE: I'm not saying you have to give up religion...
Posted by: thegreenknight
» You're the one that keeps up the sharade, look in the mirror
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: You're the one that keeps up the sharade, look in the mirror
Posted by: thegreenknight
» I'm attacking the falsehoods of political correctness...
Posted by: jdwismer922
» my practical real world solution is...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» totally agree...DOGMATIC religion is the problem...not belief in a god
Posted by: jdwismer922
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Posted by: jdwismer922 on May 16, 2006 7:42 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» RE: I think we would all agree on Separation of Religion from Government
Posted by: jdwismer922
» We should all be aware...there is attack on the Separation of Religion from Government
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: I think we would all agree on Separation of Religion from Government
Posted by: aussidawg
» Absolutely.
Posted by: Krotos
Comments are closed-
Posted by: cynicaloptimist on May 16, 2006 7:46 AM
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A lot of discussion seems to miss that point that Harris does not advocate atheism, as in "belief there is no god." In fact, he uses the term only begrudgingly. His point is rather that we must avoid dogmatic (i.e. un-provable) beliefs because they constrain our thinking and eliminate the possibility of rational resolution of differences. In other words, "belief in only that which can be proved" -- which some might consider "agnostic" (another insufficient term). He argues that a great deal of major world problems (not America's per se) can only be addressed when people stop believing unconditionally and start believing that which has direct, observable evidence.
His analogy to slavery is interesting. Can we imagine a society, perhaps in several hundred years, looking back on the 20th century and wondering, "How could those people have thought they were right? Don't they see how many problems they were causing by sticking to their dogmatic beliefs?" It simply won't make any sense to them. He argues such a society will find no less meaning in their lives and is not necessarily immoral in the absence of dogmatic beliefs -- these can come from rational, humanistic tendencies for which we have examples today. Interesting stuff to consider. Thanks, AlterNet!
» That's why I'm here...theists should fire away
Posted by: jdwismer922
Comments are closed-
Posted by: thegreenknight on May 16, 2006 7:49 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If one of Harris's supporters could please explain how this is a reasonable position to take, I'd appreciate it.
» Yes he was quoting a religious point of view...
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Yes he was quoting a religious point of view...
Posted by: thegreenknight
» LIKE i said "beliefs" he's talking about religion...
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: LIKE i said "beliefs" he's talking about religion...
Posted by: thegreenknight
» you're totally misinterpreting the context of the sentence...
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: you're totally misinterpreting the context of the sentence...
Posted by: thegreenknight
» NO
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: NO
Posted by: thegreenknight
» RE: NO
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: NO
Posted by: model_consumer
» the limits of tolerance
Posted by: hagwind
» RE: the limits of tolerance
Posted by: IanA
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Posted by: djtyg on May 16, 2006 7:49 AM
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Athiestic fundamentalism is just as evil and bigoted as religious fundamentalism. The same people saying "IF YOU DON'T BELIEVE LIKE ME YOU'RE WRONG AND YOU'RE LESS OF A HUMAN BEING FOR DOING SO!"
All of these attitudes only help conservatives. Islamic fundamentalism has helped the right force their agenda on America ever since 9/11. Hell, Bush was able to just use the word 9/11 for 3 years after the fact to get a free pass from just about everyone.
Christian fundamentalism-well, do I have to tell you how it helps the right?
And then Athiestic fundamentalism, which helps fuel the persecution complex that conservative Christianity needs to survive.
In the end, it's all bigotry. Until you decide that maybe, just maybe, that guy who believes in something different from yourself can be a decent human being who wants to be a moral person and is just as good as you are, then the left will lose.
Thanks a lot, Alternet! You've now just done more for the right wing with this article than a month long subscription to the Wall Street Journal! I hope you're happy!
And to all you commenters who say religious people should be mocked, congratulations to you as well. You're no less bigoted than the KKK or Nazis. I hope you're really proud of yourself and your self-righteousness.
» What's the Fundamentalism you speak of?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» Don't mince words.
Posted by: djtyg
» To be perfectly clear with you...
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: To be perfectly clear with you...
Posted by: kick
» Interesting....where exactly to you stand kick...are you playing both sides?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» I'm an atheist but...
Posted by: riffraff2001
» IS THIS ALL YOU HAVE THEISTS? Can't you come up with anything better than this weak argument?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: IS THIS ALL YOU HAVE THEISTS? Can't you come up with anything better than this weak argument?
Posted by: kick
» RE: IS THIS ALL YOU HAVE THEISTS? Can't you come up with anything better than this weak argument?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: IS THIS ALL YOU HAVE THEISTS? Can't you come up with anything better than this weak argument?
Posted by: kick
» RE: IS THIS ALL YOU HAVE THEISTS? Can't you come up with anything better than this weak argument?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» You're a faker.
Posted by: djtyg
» Who's a faker?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Who's a faker?
Posted by: djtyg
» Like I said...is this all you got baby...wooooo bring it holmezzz
Posted by: jdwismer922
» Are you trying to get crazeee with me hessaaaa don't you know I'm an atheist?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Just another example of how fundamentalism helps the right.
Posted by: Uncle Tupelo
» WHAT'S THE proof of the existense or non-existence of God?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: WHAT'S THE proof of the existense or non-existence of God?
Posted by: aonghus36
» ACTUALLY, I'm not..Atheism=lack of belief=a consciencous CHOICE i made..
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: WHAT'S THE proof of the existense or non-existence of God?
Posted by: djtyg
» Yeah, and your argument is that you can prove the existence of God...
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Just another example of how fundamentalism helps the right.
Posted by: djtyg
» Ok, so bring it...bring the philosophical debate...somebody will win the debate
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Ok, so bring it...bring the philosophical debate...somebody will win the debate
Posted by: djtyg
» Bushisms,Rovisms,Cheneyisms...You've learned from the best..you make a statement...
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Bushisms,Rovisms,Cheneyisms...You've learned from the best..you make a statement...
Posted by: djtyg
» Thankyou
Posted by: jdwismer922
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ABetterFuture on May 16, 2006 8:17 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» And your point is...
Posted by: jdwismer922
» I would again to refer to Austin Cline on About.com...
Posted by: jdwismer922
Comments are closed-
Posted by: jdwismer922 on May 16, 2006 8:30 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» Much love to AlterNET...I use you as a reference guide everyday
Posted by: jdwismer922
» Props to my homeboy Sam Harris...he sends out good material all the time...
Posted by: jdwismer922
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Moonray on May 16, 2006 9:05 AM
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1) Separate religion from government. Demand an end to the tax breaks now granted religious groups. Demand that laws based mainly or solely on religious beliefs (ban of the morning-after pill, ban on certain activities on Sunday, ban on sales of certain sex-related products, bans on gay marriage, etc.) be abolished.
2) Prohibit churches or individuals from isolating children under 18 in private schools. Require a certain amount of public instruction for all children, even if only by internet.
» YES YES AND YES...Keep them Separate,End RLUIPA, End FaithBased Initiative,American Theocrats:Bush
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Basic steps we should take right away
Posted by: Krotos
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Posted by: Michelle on May 16, 2006 9:17 AM
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That weird faith in a particularly Western way of seeing the world, in the truth of a stunted way of relating to the world.
These monotheistic religions are one side of the western cultural coin. Rationalism is the other. Ugly, disconnected stuff either way.
So now this rationalist wants to evangelize just like the Christians do. Great. All these people are arrogantly trying to spiritually coerce other people toward their "truth," apparently unaware (all of them) that they don't have the first clue about the core flaws in their way of perceiving the world.
Between these people and the New Age creepy folks, it's getting harder to remember that stunted Euro-centric worldviews do not define the spiritual landscape. But I remember.
» and a PS
Posted by: Michelle
» Curious...how did a philsophical view become a religion?
Posted by: jdwismer922
» You're just rationalizing
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: rationalism is also a religion
Posted by: IanA
Comments are closed-
Posted by: yellow on May 16, 2006 9:22 AM
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: NoPCZone on May 16, 2006 9:37 AM
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The writings at the core of most faiths are not an omnibus explanation of everything. Nowhere have I ever read in any religious text a claim that all that could be known is contained within. In fact the Bible, central to 3 faiths, states quite the opposite. Just as a person would not use a can opener to change a tire, reasonable people do not use faith texts as a basis for anything but faith.
Third is people who do not hold to a faith, but 'adopt' and use it for their own purposes. This is as old as history. In the Christian Tradition Jesus warned his followers about people who would do such things. The term 'wolves in sheep clothing' comes from this very warning. The same abuse of religion is doubtless true of any faith.
Last, most people are lazy. I would wager that out of 1,000 evangelicals picked at random, easily less than 200 have read the entire New Testament much less the entire Bible. If one were to extent the survey to see if they have investigated other faiths first-hand, the number would be very small. Most fire breathing religious right supporters have ben hand-fed and have largely second-hand knowledge of their primary texts.
Just because many ill-led, ill-read, and duped people have done stupid things in the name of a faith or god does not condemn the faith that was misused. Much of what is good and right in our society and world is a direct product of the faith that the people who made the changes followed. That tells me it is of value.
» Blame the People...that's easy...Blaming Dogma takes work and research
Posted by: jdwismer922
» RE: Blame the People...that's easy...Blaming Dogma takes work and research
Posted by: NoPCZone
» More rationalizing
Posted by: Moonray
Comments are closed-
Posted by: celinaa on May 16, 2006 9:47 AM
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"The End of Faith", not every faith is born equal. It's different to have faith in your doctor or in the team who designed the plane you are travelling than in any mental process, name it god or whatever you want.
"getting rid of all forms of faith" faith in personal mental process (name them god or any other name: energy, people united, gaia) and religion are traits evolution gave us. We used to develop faith to be able to follow our leader who decided how to save the flock. The guy who used to think too much was a dinner for predators so faith and religion is in our genes. We can not and we must not get rid of faith, it's evil to do it and it is impossible.
I'm religious, I can't avoid it, so I take care this handicap don't disturb my rationality.
Religion probably is a disease which we will cure in the next centuries if the world we are forging rewards rational behaviour.
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Posted by: cry0fan on May 16, 2006 9:55 AM
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» Mine is..Master (oops) can't say that here
Posted by: jdwismer922
» Yeah, death is not a disease that can be cured.
Posted by: Sojourner
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Posted by: Sojourner on May 16, 2006 10:05 AM
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However, now that physics has to deal with unobservable entities (quarks, etc.) it finds it necessary to operate within some of the same problems associated with faith: "What do I call what I have just observed?"
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Posted by: rayo on May 16, 2006 10:09 AM
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While I have my own problems with the uses of religion, we should remember that, as social, cultural, and historical discourses, religion and secular humanism can constitute both a response to or the re-enforcement of normativity.
» Yeah, 'Do as I say, not as I do' afflicts all ideologies.
Posted by: Sojourner
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Posted by: NoPCZone on May 16, 2006 10:14 AM
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Dogma is dogma--be it atheist, agnostic, deist, jewish, muslim, christian, wiccan, whatever. If faith is and should be personal & private then the lack thereof should also be. If someone shows up at an organizing event for an environmental concern they do not deserve to be subjected to a diatribe on the evils of their faith in official or casual conversation. People who do this are just reducing their numbers and hurting their cause.
The fact is that there is room in the tent for everyone who will be tolerant of others who will reciprocate. There is a place for discussions and arguments of faith/belief/spirituality, but that is not in the mainstream arena of politics in most cases.
If you are an atheist-- good for you. If you are a christian-- good for you. If you are jewish-- good for you. If you are a wiccan-good for you. Now let's drop the dogma and get on with the issues of our community, nation and world. A group of diverse people who don't spend their time and energy devouring each other can find a lot of common ground and accomplish much.
» RE: Intolerance by those preaching tolerance
Posted by: ezilla
» RE: Intolerance by those preaching tolerance
Posted by: IanA
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Posted by: pdxlinuxchix on May 16, 2006 10:32 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is nothing wrong with believing in god, per se. There is nothing wrong with believing that Jesus taught that humans can and should live together with compassion. Hell, there's nothing inherently wrong with believing that one day you will spend eternity next to Jesus someplace. The problem comes when folks insist that these non-provable assertions are universally true. I am an ex-Christian and I know--don't think but know--that to be true to the spirit of what is in the Bible one must have a certain level of intolerance. It is built into the framework. Christianity makes no bones about the matter, it considers itself the One True Way and while Christians can be tolerant of other religions, at the end of the day the Bible says what it says; if you believe that God sent Jesus for the forgiveness of sins (and if you don't, are you a Christian?) and that only through accepting Jesus can you be forgiven (and again, there's really no escaping that, there's no wiggle room) then it is an inescapable conclusion that those who do not accept Jesus will pay the price for that non-acceptance. Now, you may recoil at that suggestion but if you are Christian and honest about your religion, you end up having to admit that that *is* what your religion teaches.
Given this, why should the rest of us be silent? What benefit accrues to society by our being complicit in maintaining a fiction with no more empirical veracity than the Easter Bunny or Santa Claus? There are implications to the religiosity of our nation, folks, I'll lay out three interesting stats:
1> In the US, fewer people know about Darwinian theory than in any other major industrialized nation. In fact, in order to find a population where as few people know the basics of Darwinian as in the States you have to look at nations like Bulgaria and Slovenia. In school systems across this country, people are clamoring to have religion taught in biology class.
2> In the US, we have the second highest infant mortality rate of any major industrialized nation. Only Latvia does worse than we do on that measure.
3> The US also has the highest teen pregnancy rate in the industrialized world.
Now, what does that have to do with religion? Everything. Because we keep silent, religion gets taught in biology classes dressed up as 'intelligent design'. Because of religion we hold to this outmoded way of dealing with pregnancy which ends up leading to women *not* having prenatal care that is demonstrable in saving lives. Because of religion we teach abstinence instead of giving children *good*, whole-picture sex education. I'm not suggesting that religion is the *only* cause of items 2 and 3 but we delude ourselves if we say that it isn't a cause.
Sam Harris, whatever flaws he has in presentation, has the courage to break the rules and start the dialog of saying "if you want your religious beliefs translated to public policy, the rest of us have an obligation to challenge you to demonstrate that your religious beliefs have some kind of high correspondence mapping to the real world".
» Exactly right
Posted by: Moonray
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Posted by: Sojourner on May 16, 2006 10:36 AM
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My only problem with organized religion is that, as with everything else, it can be peddled as promising to do something for you. Yet the message of all the great religions is that it is up to us to do something. Jesus’ golden rule is found in them all. Do to them as you would have them do to you. Treat others as you wish to be treated. If you had life to live over again would you want to do again what you are now doing?
I understand communal worship as an opportunity to gather to wish each other and all living things well. Kant taught us that the one guaranteed good is goodwill. That’s a faith worth keeping.
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Saitia on May 16, 2006 10:38 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The religion of the spirit requires only unity of experience— uniformity of destiny— making full allowance for diversity of belief. The religion of the spirit requires only uniformity of insight, not uniformity of viewpoint and outlook. The religion of the spirit does not demand uniformity of intellectual views, only unity of spirit feeling.
» New Age nonsense
Posted by: Moonray
» Old age nonsense
Posted by: Sojourner
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Posted by: radnar on May 16, 2006 10:53 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article has raised more hatred than almost anything I have read on Alternet for several years. People! Let's chill out here, please.
Mr. Harris raises some very good points and I don't believe that he is directly attacking anyone. I don't believe everything he says but that is my right. I certainly don't believe everything many Theists say either but that is also my right.
I do believe that I am no better than anyone else but that no one is any better than I am. We are truly equal in the only way that matters. Here and Now. We are all equal because we are all going to die sometime. We are no better AND no worse than anything on this world or anyother because we are going to end, even the Sun and all of the stars. What happens afterwards is a matter of personal belief and all sorts of tradegy has happened because of those beliefs.
Here and Now, let's let people have their own opinions.
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Posted by: ZPaul on May 16, 2006 11:02 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Sam Harris .... practices Zen meditation and believes in the value of mystical experiences."
From Webster´s Third New International Dictionary:
mystical: having a spiritual meaning, existence, reality, or comparable value that is neither apparent to the senses nor obvious to the intelligence: relating to such a value: of, resulting from, or manifesting an individual´s direct or intimate knowledge of or communion with God(as through contemplation, vision, an inner light),
mysticism: the experience of mystical union or direct communion with ultimate reality reported by mystics: a theory of mystical knowledge: the doctrine or belief that direct knowledge of God, of spiritual truth, of ultimate reality, or comparable matters is attainable through immediate ituition, insight, or illumination and in a way differing from ordinary sense perception or ratiocination.
.......Which dictionary does Sam Harris use?
» RE: "The Value of Mystical Experiences" - Sam Harris is a Believer
Posted by: mamawheelie
» RE: "The Value of Mystical Experiences" - Quote from Main text
Posted by: mamawheelie
» RE: "The Value of Mystical Experiences" - Sam Harris is a Believer
Posted by: ZPaul
» ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Posted by: decembrist
» RE: ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Posted by: ZPaul
» RE: "The Value of Mystical Experiences" - Sam Harris is a Believer
Posted by: Dan Metcalf
Comments are closed-
Posted by: zooeyhall on May 16, 2006 11:06 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Passivity---people out here accept loss of economic power, bullying by corporations, concentration of wealth in the hands of the few, loss of jobs, environmental degradation, etc.---by basically re-assuring themselves that it is "God's will" or that "God will fix it all someday"
or conversely--
Some use it as a justification for agressiveness and economic inequality i.e. "I got my reward for believing in Jesus and following his ways. The poor are poor because their faith wasn't as strong as mine, etc. etc. I lived God's life and that is why I now have my McMansion and a million $$$ in the bank".
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ezilla on May 16, 2006 11:08 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
White
Female
Liberal
Femminist
Atheist
Wife
American
College Graduate
etc.
Do you know me now?
Every one of those words has built in connotations. But honestly, i could list labels all day and you still wouldn't really know me, would you?
Atheist - would you know I was raised Christian? Work for a Christian organization?
American - would you know I spent my formative years on a Canadian island?
Femminist - no I don't spend my free time burning bras and hating men.
Labels are stereotypes - based in a nugget of truth, certainly, but hardly difinitive of any single person. Religious labels are particularly loaded. They are used to unite and to divide. I certainly don't agree with this article 100%, but my grain of salt and I prefer to open-mindedly entertain a differing opinion and take something away from the discussion.
No matter the literal words used, I get the feeling the author agrees that that whatever your religious label, we must all identify first as Human. All other labels are both secondary and tertiary. If I treat you as human first, catholic second, religion becomes a non-issue.
You can't control the actions of others, but you can control yourself.
» RE: The Problems Caused by Labels
Posted by: mamawheelie
» RE: The Problems Caused by Labels
Posted by: ezilla
» RE: mick3
Posted by: solrev
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Roverton on May 16, 2006 11:54 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Comparing religion to spirituality is ignorance.
Most people attacking the ancient practices within the "New Age" have had no extensive experience in those areas.
Peripheral at best.
PRE-JUDICED. Judged in advance of data.
NO EXPERIENCE, NO REAL RESEARCH = IGNORACE. Works the same on any topic.
I'm not religious. I try to be spiritual. The concept that we are connected by something more than just a philosophy.
A bonding.
No names in particular, but some of these kind and loving "Rational" posts have the derisive humor of a scared and cruel litttle child.
That's the sort of "Rational Kindness" that only a spiritual person could drive cross country with.
Religion runs on that very system. No experince, so just believe.
PS: How can anyone with a scientific mindset believe that telling a world to ditch their religious beliefs will just work? Why hasn't it yet? A rude awakening in the form of Armaggeddon might just, but then it's too late. Academia is understandably wounded by a world that no longer values their work. But bitterness is creeping out and that alone can scare droves of potential believer away.
Not rational.
FACT.
Humanity will continue to explore concepts. We jusrt simply will. Aethism has to come up with more than mockery to deter us from experimenting with other ways of living.
» "The gods we worship write their names on our faces." --RW Emerson
Posted by: Sojourner
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Posted by: mousiedung on May 16, 2006 12:15 PM
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I don't care how the universe got here, but I'd like to know why the universe got here. Neither science nor theology has a plausible answer to that one.
As far as religious tolerance goes, I understand the everyone in the US has a constitutional right to believe in whatever they want to. However, I have no constitutional obligation to believe they are sane.
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Posted by: LMNOP on May 16, 2006 12:17 PM
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Here are the types of ideas of evidence based thinkers:
(1) When evidence is incontovertible, we have proof and we proceed with assurance. We know we are right and are justified in that.
(2) When evidence is suggestive or supportive but does not exclude other possibilities, we have belief and we proceed with caution knowing that we are making an educated guess.
(3) When there is no evidence for a proposition, or there is insufficient evidence to justify belief, we are undecided and we don't act at all unless we must. If we must act, we know that we are guessing wildly.
Now, here's how faith based thinking works:
You are in category three - no evidence except fallacious arguments and an apocryphal source book - just pure wild guessing, but you choose to be in category one, so you just forget that you are unsure and make yourself certain by refusing to consider the matter again. Anything that threatens that reverie is considered the devil and to be ignored.
Then, if you're an evangelical in the mold of the American movement, you impose your belief system by law and by threat of force onto people who have not taken the Kool-Aid with you and consider your rules arbitrary and counterproductive.
Isn't that nice.
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Posted by: johnwilkins1672 on May 16, 2006 12:19 PM
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I also doubt that rationality would bring us peace. the fact is that people who are rational can have a variety of perspectives, and be as angry and as certain as individuals who are irrational. There is no necessary connection between rationality and, say, empathy.
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Posted by: jpinder on May 16, 2006 12:27 PM
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BTW Here is something menacing that G. Bush senior stated in an interview:
“No, I don't know that atheists should be considered as citizens, nor should they be considered patriots. This is one nation under God.”
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Posted by: johngary66 on May 16, 2006 12:39 PM
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Posted by: American Reflections on May 16, 2006 12:38 PM
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If you believe there is no God, that is certainly your right, just as my belief that there is a God is my right. My own belief system is not based on, nor is it subject to, approval from persons or religious institutions that disagree with me.
I was raised in an evangelical religion, and as I look back on it, I see a great deal of harm in the manner in which it was presented to me as a child. Yet, now, as I close in on my 70th year on this planet, I look back and also see a great deal of good. It was from my religious training that I learned everything that has been good in my life, and which I believe is the good in this world, those things being honesty, respect for all living things, compassion for those who are suffering or in need, tolerance, and justice. And I believe that anything that flies in the face of common human decency is wrong. At least, it is wrong for me.
I don't get much involved with dogma because that is a man-made type of prejudice that denies the right of the individual to think for theirself. Where people like Pat Robertson or Jerry Falwell are concerned, I see them as the worst of the worst, making their fortunes from the fear of other people. And in considering the supposed religious conversion of George Bush who claims that God is leading him....whispering in his ear, so to speak...I have to say that the God I believe in would most likely not choose a chronic liar to represent Him.
In reading the comments on this forum, I am reminded of something I read many years ago, and in quoting it, I am going to change it to fit this debate. I think it is a quote by Somerset Maugham...but it could have been someone else, and it was focused on the the question of whether or not we are alone in this universe. As I recall, he said, "Sometimes I think we are alone in thie universe, and sometimes I think we are not. Either way, the concept is mind-boggling." That can easily be changed to reflect the issue of whether of not there is a God. Sometimes I believe there is a God, and sometimes I question it, but either way it is a concept that boggles the mind.
I choose to believe that God exists, although I'm not sure what form He takes. Mankind has always interpreted the world around him according to his understanding of the things he experienced. The more primitive his understanding, the more primitive were his gods, i.e. "rain gods, gods of wind, sun gods and thunder gods." Back in the 1970s, a writer by the name of Erik Von Danniken (sp?) published a couple of books that suggested God was a spaceman. I read them, and much of what he said made sense to me. Whatever phenomena was designated as "God," it seems always to have come from the sky. And exerpts from the Bible can be easily be defined as beings from other planets, come to earth in chariots of fire. For the moment, dispense with your skepticism and consider that there may be a basis for that. If God is an alien being who has visited earth, bringing with him evidence of a highly developed knowledge, it seems natural that primitive man would have viewed this being as "God." If there is any truth to this does this take away from the belief that there is a God? Of course not. It simply changes the mysticism surrounding the God concept and forces it into a more understandable belief system, yet it remains unprovable.
For whatever may be my needs, I have chosen my beliefs. The rest of the world must choose theirs. And whatever those choices may be, let us hope for acceptance and tolerance of the beliefs of others.
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Posted by: robmikejas on May 16, 2006 12:52 PM
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