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Why is it that even religious moderates are so often convinced that you need religion or faith to be a good person or to find purpose in life? It is incredibly arrogant. But I guess I shouldn't be surprised. It is really no more arrogant than believing that out of thousands of irrational beliefs, theirs is the only one that is right.

I listened to The Spirit of Things tonight. Big mistake. The guy being interviewed was amazing, but tripped and fell headfirst into the metaphoric mud when he said that faith is necessary for purpose. And Rachael Kohn clearly showed her limitations when she implied that religion gives us charity. Of course she ignored all the charitable atheists and agnostics (oh, but they don't count -- how could atheists possibly be charitable?). Ignore the fact that the least religious countries regularly live up to their international aid promises, whereas the most religious countries have never done so. The least religious countries have the most peaceful and healthy populations, whereas the most religious countries are split by fear and hatred and obscene wealth contrasted with appalling poverty.

Are people so willingly blind?

Sure, some religious people can be good and charitable, but on balance religion's harm far, far outweighs any good it has ever done. While atheists and agnostics quietly get on with the job of doing good without constantly trumpeting how great they are.

Date: 2007-07-10 04:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] miriam-e.livejournal.com
As "anonymous" said, the point is not whether some atheists are evil. Here is an illustration to clarify it:

Alice and Betty are talking about ants.

Religion starts from the position that it is inspired by good and is the path to being a better person. In actual fact far more killing and other evil deeds are done by religious people than atheists. Yes, there are good and moral religious people, just as there are good and charitable atheists, and there are truly horrible religious people just as there are similar atheists, but this is a distraction from the central point: that religion promotes itself as the guide to good and moral behaviour, when it is actually the opposite.

Date: 2007-07-11 02:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] idealistagain.livejournal.com
In actual fact far more killing and other evil deeds are done by religious people than atheists.

I'm still waiting for some documentation of this. Not only is there no documentation, but you don't even lay out any standard by which we can determine if its true. You say its "actual fact" but its not fact at all, its just a statement waiting for facts to back it up. Since there are no facts presented to back it up, it only falls into the realm of opinion.

the central point: that religion promotes itself as the guide to good and moral behaviour, when it is actually the opposite.

I think this is very oversimplified; there's a lot more issues involved here. Most religious people do not claim to have a monopoly on perfection. The exceptions to that are the ones who are so blinded by an ideology that they lose the ability to think rationally--and that can be caused by any number of factors other than religion. I also think you can't really make the claim that its "the opposite". The opposite, as near as I can infer, would be that religion is somehow a guide to evil and although I think you can make a good case that many people have corrupted religious doctrine for evil ends, that's a far different thing than proving that religion itself is evil.


Keep in mind, that for the most part I agree with your posts and I don't consider myself particularly religious. Its simply that in this case, I feel you are going too far and presenting unjustified conclusions that aren't really supported by hard fact and that concerns me.

Date: 2007-07-11 04:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] miriam-e.livejournal.com
Fair enough. :) The statistics published in The Journal of Religion and Society at http://moses.creighton.edu/JRS/2005/2005-11.html show that homicide and other social ills correlate directly with religion.
The original article uses a tricky, but annoying technique of swapping graphs into and out of the document. I've uploaded a more readable version to my site at
http://miriam-english.org/files/religion_ill.html

You are right that I've assumed that this holds true for big, dramatic confrontations like wars. I'd be surprised if it doesn't, considering the ease with which religion can be used to dupe people into doing irrational things, but I will see if I can find reliable info to validate or falsify my assumption. Thanks. I honestly appreciate being called on a possible mistake.

I didn't say that most religious people claim to have a monopoly on perfection. I said religion promotes itself as a guide to good and moral behavior. I think that is a fair enough statement, and I think most religious people would agree with it. When I say that it is the opposite I don't mean that religion is evil (though I do think a pretty good case could be made for that). What I mean is that religion is a guide to behavior that bad and immoral (the opposite of good and moral). There is very little in the bible that exhorts people to do good or be a truly moral person, and virtually nothing in that disgusting document the koran. Most other religious literature that I've read is similarly lacking in the simple niceties of being good human beings. They all tend to pander to xenophobia and maintaining the status quo, generally having more to do with hate than love. So, yes, I'd say I'm justified in saying they promote the opposite of good and moral behavior.

Yep, :) I realise you are trying to keep my comments honest, and I am grateful for that. I hate it when I use shaky assumptions and I'm always relieved to be pulled up on it. There is nothing more embarrassing for me than looking over something much, much later, after an exchange has died down, and realising I made a major mistake. Much better is to be able to correct it while to conversation is still active. I'll see what I can find out about religious involvement in the major conflagrations.

Date: 2007-07-11 03:14 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] idealistagain.livejournal.com
Religion starts from the position that it is inspired by good and is the path to being a better person. In actual fact far more killing and other evil deeds are done by religious people than atheists.

Yes, religion starts out from the premise that its a guide to a better path. Again, that is a guide. Religion makes no claim to perfection in how its followers choose to apply it. Perfection is an unrealistic standard by which to judge anything, especially people. I'm sure everyone, if they are honest with themselves, can think of numerous examples in their lives where they've fallen far short of living up to the values they hold. I think its further unrealistic to expect perfection in another belief system when you do not apply the same standard to your own belief system, ie, glossing over the atrocities committed by the Soviet Union in the name of its decidedly atheistic ideology.

Is a person who makes pronouncements of believing in humanity and tolerance living up to her values when she makes grossly overgeneralized and discriminatory statements to attack a belief system that just happens to be different from her own?

Date: 2007-07-11 05:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] miriam-e.livejournal.com
The problem is that although religion claims to be a guide to being a better person, when you look at what this guide really is, it is the opposite. All the major religions inculcate intolerance, hate, fear, and subservience through giving up the ability to think objectively. Anybody who follows those teachings to perfection becomes an extremely evil person. The best, most moral religious people that I know hardly follow their religious book at all. They pick and choose what what they want out of their book -- so little in fact, that it becomes absurd to claim being christian or muslim or jewish.

I don't know why you keep thinking I gloss over the point about the Soviet Union. I've never disagreed that there are bad atheists. That said, the fact that the soviet leaders were atheist is almost irrelevant. Most of those murders weren't committed in the name of atheism any more than Hitler's were because he was vegetarian. (Some were -- religious soviets were persecuted when they refused to give up their religion.)

:) I'm not attacking a belief system just because it is different from my own -- I don't have a belief system. It always seems odd to me how many people think atheism is a belief, when it is actually the lack of a belief (I don't believe there is a god, though I'm perfectly willing to concede its existence if such evidence became available.) What I don't like about religion is how it damages people and society. That's why I attack religion. We have spent centuries letting the elephant in the room walk all over people, yet politely ignoring its damage. It hasn't helped. Religion is currently trying to pervert science teaching in school, stop research into stem cells, characterise gays and lesbians as abominations, block safe sex practices, and bring on a jihad and armageddon. In the past it was the rationale for countless slaughters (crusades, Ireland, Kosovo, witch burnings, etc) It is about time good people stood up and pointed out what a horror religion is. Religion doesn't stand for good and love. The koran has hate on almost every page. The bible does too. To get a message of love out of the bible you have to get disbelieve about 90% of the book. Much better to drop it altogether, understand that love and tolerance for your fellow humans is the most logical way to be, and avoid giving the fundamentalists their foothold to power.

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