Seth wrote:Forty Two wrote:Seth wrote:Animavore wrote:What has any of this shite you're all talking about, and whatever the other eejit is saying, got to do with the story in the OP?
It demonstrates the religious nature of the Atheist mindset,
Assuming
arguendo the truth of that assertion, is that a bad thing, in your view?
No. Why should it be? There's nothing inherently bad or wrong with religion or religious belief. It is and has been a civilizing and pacifying force throughout history and by and large it helps individuals cope with the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune. I consider it a heinous and evil act to try to convince people that there is no God if their belief in God makes them happier and gives them peace and solace, as it so obviously does for billions of people.
O.k., so the alleged religious nature of the Atheist mindset is not a bad thing. Good.
As such, the religious nature of the Atheist mindset would fall within the civilizing and pacifying force, allowing individuals to cope with the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune. Further, trying to convince Atheists that there is a God would be just as heinous and evil an act because if the lack of believe in a God makes them happier and gives them peace and solace, then it would be evil and heinous to try to convince them that they are wrong.
While he was referring to small "a" atheism and not your specially defined big "A" Atheism, his point is true in my view when Isaac Asimov said - "Although the time of death is approaching me, I am not afraid of dying and going to Hell or (what would be considerably worse) going to the popularized version of Heaven. I expect death to be nothingness and, for removing me from all possible fears of death, I am thankful to atheism. "
In that sense, a person who has found peace and solace in atheism is just as justified in defending his view as a person who believes in God. Both are defending their peace and solace. Do you scorn God-believers when they advance their religious beliefs, exercising their first amendment rights to both hold and express their religious views? Do you find it evil for them to try to convince atheists or Atheists of God's existence, when so many atheists and Atheists would say that they find peace and solace in the absence of gods?
Seth wrote:
There's nothing inherently superior about Atheism or the belief that gods don't exist.
Agreed. There is nothing INHERENTLY superior. There is nothing INHERENTLY superior in anything. It could be argued that there is nothing INHERENTLY superior in truth over lies, life over death, pleasure over paid, receiving fellatio over not receiving fellatio. There is no "inherent" superiority in them.
Seth wrote:
My experience is that it makes those who believe that way unsociable and unpleasant to be around.
Your experience is your experience, and is also colored by your preference. There are people one person finds disagreeable and loathsome, but another person might find them pleasant and even be their best friend. Some people don't like other people, and some people don't like what other people say and do.
In my experience, people who wear their religions on their sleeves are unsociable and unpleasant to be around, and those that preach and proselytize are even moreso. That's my view of it. That's why I rarely, if ever, bring up atheism with anyone. It just isn't a topic I discuss with people in social contexts. Internet discussion forums are a better and more appropriate forum, because, like this thread, topics are opened to people with an interest.
Seth wrote:
The Atheist obsession with interfering in other people's practice of their religious beliefs is one of the most pernicious, cruel and downright antisocial aspects of the religion.
Any practice in "interfering" in other people's practice of religious beliefs is pernicious, cruel and antisocial. However, I've never seen an atheist "interfere" with another person's practice of religion. Discussions on internet forums are not "interference."
If by "interfering" you mean "persuading" others to change their view, then atheists don't hold a candle to the religious. I get religious people at my door telling me I have to believe what they believe. I've never gotten that knock on the door from an atheist. Devout Christians and Muslims have no qualms about proselytizing and trying to convince atheists out of their atheism.
Seth wrote:
For something they don't believe in, Atheists seem to spend far more time ranting and raving about somebody else's beliefs than they do thinking about the essentially nihilistic nature of their own system of beliefs and practices.
Perhaps so, but that isn't "interfering" in another person's beliefs. It's no worse than Christians and Muslims trying to convert people to their religion, and that's an avoid mission of many religions.
Atheism is not nihilism, by the way. I am an atheist, but I'm not a nihilist. Nihilism posits that nothing in the world has real existence. I don't hold to that, and as atheists tend to be materialists, it is probably true that MOST atheists are not nihilists.
Further, many atheists, like Buddhist atheists and Jain atheists and Jewish atheists, have religious beliefs and practices, and are far from nihilists.
Seth wrote:
Most Atheists would be far nicer people if they would just shut the fuck up and mind their own business.
This is a true statement of almost everyone. If Christians and Muslims would shut the fuck up and mind their own business, there would be a far less need for "activist" atheists in the world. The reason a lot atheists don't shut the fuck up is because atheists are inundated with the messages of Christians and Muslims. If the Christians and Muslims don't need to "shut the fuck up" then I certainly feel no compulsion to leave their assertions unanswered.
"If belief in heaven was private, like the tooth fairy, I’d say fine. But tooth fairy supporters don’t come around to your house and try to convert you. They don’t try to teach your children stultifying pseudo-science in school. They don’t try to prevent access to contraception. The religious won’t leave us alone. These are not just private delusions, they’re ones they want to inflict on other people." - Christopher Hitchens.
Now, leave aside his view that they are delusions. Assume they are not delusions, but merely differences of opinions. The point still stands. They won't leave us alone. They want to get us to accept their religious opinions, and they come around knocking on our doors to do it, and they feel no shame in doing so.
Seth wrote:
And that's why I'm not an Atheist, I'm a non-theistic Tolerist™ who is satisfied to let people believe as they like so long as their actions are peaceable and they do not initiate force or fraud against others.
Except that you seem to be very tolerant of the proselytizing and persuasion, free expression of belief, on the part of god-believers, but you aren't very tolerant of the same from atheists. Or, maybe I'm getting you wrong. Are you o.k. with atheists speaking their minds, advancing their nonbelief, and looking for converts to atheism or Atheism? Or, are you not o.k. with it? If you aren't o.k. with it, are you equally not o.k. with the same conduct from god-believers?
Seth wrote:
That's why I'm not an Atheist, I'm a non-theistic Tolerist™. I really don't mind what you believe or do as long as you don't harm others.
Here again you change terms. What "harm" are you suggesting atheists cause? By persuasion? By speaking their minds? Or, are they doing something else? Like,...... engaging in violence?
What of the traditional systemic discrimination against atheists in the law -- disqualifications from public service? Disqualification from testifying as a witness? Disqualification from public office? These are real legal disabilities that god-believers and religious folks imposed on atheists. I don't know any atheists who would disable religious people with similar laws.
Seth wrote:
Does demonstrating the religious nature of "Atheism" refute it? Reduce it in some way? Make it less likely to be true?
It highlights the essential hypocrisy of Atheism. In the battle against religion, Atheism is the most devoutly religious crusader of the age.
Well, it's impossible to answer that because I am still unclear what you mean by "Atheism" with a capital A, and how many people actually even arguably fall within this label of capital A Atheism. Can you define Atheism for me? If you already have done so, I'm sorry, but I really don't know what you mean by that. It's not a common term.
I think there is no hypocrisy in "atheism" per se. And, most atheists are not religious at all, as far as I can tell.
Seth wrote:
It also demonstrates how intellectually inferior Atheists actually are by demonstrating that their own dogmas violate their own dogmas, resulting in a real dog's breakfast of irrationality and unreason. Whether or not God exists is a quintessentially scientific question, but Atheists try to use pseudo-scientific reasoning to imply (or prove) that God does not exist by claiming that God is "supernatural"
That's not normally an atheist claim, per se. That's a claim made by many religious people - that God is outside the natural universe, that he is super-natural. He can't be detected by scientific means -- that's a thing I've heard religious people, including Christians commonly say.
I would be happy indeed if Christians would apply the same scientific standards and concepts to their God as they do to nature in general. If they did that, then we would speak the same language about it. But, they generally don't. It's from Christians that you hear -- god works in mysterious ways and anything is possible with god and various references to miracles (which are deviations from nature -- super-natural).
Seth wrote:
and therefore cannot exist while at the same time being entirely unable to provide a scintilla of scientific evidence of their assertions. The twists and turns of their labyrinthine minds rival the home of the Minotaur.
One might suppose that those who claim rationalism might actually demonstrate a smidgen of rational thought from time to time...but noooooooo!
So, the Atheists are just as irrational as the Christians and Muslims, then?
“When I was in college, I took a terrorism class. ... The thing that was interesting in the class was every time the professor said ‘Al Qaeda’ his shoulders went up, But you know, it is that you don’t say ‘America’ with an intensity, you don’t say ‘England’ with the intensity. You don’t say ‘the army’ with the intensity,” she continued. “... But you say these names [Al Qaeda] because you want that word to carry weight. You want it to be something.” - Ilhan Omar