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11-08-2002, 10:19 PM | #21 | |||||
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Gurdur,
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Sincerely, Goliath |
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11-08-2002, 10:21 PM | #22 | ||
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agapeo,
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Sincerely, Goliath (edited for clarity) [ November 08, 2002: Message edited by: Goliath ]</p> |
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11-08-2002, 10:27 PM | #23 | |
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Starboy,
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11-09-2002, 01:03 AM | #24 |
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Originally posted by agapeo:
<strong>If you respect them on the basis of how they behave then don't you essentially respect what they believe?</strong> Let me use an actual example here - my mother. She encouraged me to be independent and to have a career which made me plenty of money. She was a Catholic at the time. Her encouragement therefore had very little to do with her religion (except perhaps the plenty of money part) and therefore, I can respect her without having any respect for Catholicism. |
11-09-2002, 02:16 AM | #25 |
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I'd question the 'harmlessness' of certain belief systems. If there's one thing that human beings are particularly bad at, it's predicting what the consequences of their actions are. Examples:
(1) smokers (and this is personal experience as an ex-smoker) don't just "weigh up the risks" (if they even do that), they actually believe that they won't get something fatal or seriously debilitating. Sadly, these beliefs are overwhelmingly wrong. (2) when we travel by air, we pollute with CO2 and other nasties as well as stimulating cirrus clouds which have a measurable effect on temperature (after 9/11 there were fewer flights and there was a growth of 3C in the USA's temperature extremes). Yet air travel increases every year. Two attitudes prevail in this: that "it won't happen to me"; or "whatever I do is so inconsequential that it can't possibly make a difference" (forgetting that a zillion other people are reasoning likewise). Now, let's focus on religious beliefs. All of them rely on "faith", a belief that is "true because I want it to be" (or someone else told me so or a book said so). The result: a culture whereby arbitrary beliefs are held in reverence; a free-for-all system that has allowed, nay encouraged racism (remember slavery?), sexism (most religions are paternalistic. I was outraged at the recent events in Saudi Arabia where a primary school burnt down and the police refused to allow the girls out because they weren't suitably attired), plain hate crime (remember witch burning?). Why? Because people were encouraged to believe things that made them feel better about themselves and were unwilling or unable to see the consequences of those beliefs. So I say: disrepect all forms of faith-based belief - xianity, islam, UFO's, ESP, paganism. They are the problem, not the solution. As for the individuals caught in their grip, they have every right to believe what they want so long as it hurts no human or animal or institution, but the onus of proof of harmlessness should be on the believer and the evidence to the contrary is damning. |
11-09-2002, 02:18 AM | #26 | |
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Religious philosophies are divided into three sorts: the true one (metaphyiscal naturalism), the harmless (paganism, Sikhism, liberal Christianity and most of them) and the cancerous-dualistic (fundamentalist Christianity and Islam). Metaphysical Naturalism forms the basis of all law (democratic Secular Humanism); harmless religions are tolerated (as long as they don't contradict Secular Humanism in their actions, that is), and cancerous-dualistic religions should be stamped out. |
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11-09-2002, 05:27 AM | #27 | |
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11-09-2002, 08:43 AM | #28 | |
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11-09-2002, 08:59 AM | #29 |
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I was raised to be respectful to religious people, in much the way I was raised to be respectful of demented old men and schizophrenics.
It is only recently, though, that I've really begun to try to make a change in the way I treat religious proselytizers and the like. I used to smile politely and tell various preachers that I simply wasn't interested. If they insisted that I pray for enlightenment, I'd say, "Oh, OK," in that wonderfully tolerant way that we might assure Grandpa that we'd inform the authorities that Generalissimo Francisco Franco was living next door. And I'd thank those who called me a good Christian in the way I'd thank a crazy homeless person for giving me a talisman against the chupacabra or something. But to hell with that. It just encourages them. I will continue to respect their right to delude themselves in any way they choose, but I do not respect, in the traditional sense, their beliefs, nor do I concede their right to spout their nonsense unchallenged. |
11-09-2002, 09:07 AM | #30 | ||
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Gurdur wrote:
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