mikeh, on 2013-January-08, 10:51, said:
It hasn't happened yet. But we can hope. As I have said many times, and as with just about everything I write this isn't original to me, religious belief made sense in the 99.99% of human experience when we had no effective understanding of the physical world. Give us time.
So basically you say that up to now mankind is nowhere able to live without religion, but in a near future we will be able to give up on it? I won't argue with this hope of yours, I am just sceptical because even the best technichans needs consolation. But maybe you are right, future will show.
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Do you actually read what others have said, and try to understand the arguments, or do you simply look for isolated passages to which you can object, provided you ignore the context? Try re-reading what I have said. Obviously human conflict is multi-factorial and obviously many wars have been fought for purposes other than religion. Does that mean that religion is not sometimes a major factor, or that it is not frequently enlisted by the warring states/nations/tribes to motivate their forces? Didn't most armies historically seek the blessing of religious figures before battle, or consecrate themselves to their god(s)?
Maybe again a beam in the own eye syndrom? I read what you write, thank you. Funnily we agree despite your tone: Conflicts are multi-factorial- and religion had been one of these factors. If my postings sounds different, I apologize.
You quoted some incidents in Pakistan to show how much hate had been there which had been religious motivation. The school killer was an example that you do not need religion for this... I really understood you in a way that most of the bad things in this world are religious motivated. Now I understood that religion is just one factor. We agree on that part.
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As for the death penalty not being part of religion, you must be profoundly ignorant of aspects of religion that many atheists know without the need to even resort to google. I can't quote the verses without research but the OT contains very clear commandments to the effect that practicing homosexuals should be put to death, and that if a man sleeps with a woman and her mother, they all should be burned to death and so on.
Yes, I know: very few would follow Leviticus today, but that's one of my points. Many religious people are hypocrites because they pick and choose which parts of their holy texts to follow. Yes, there are all kinds of mental gymnastics that people like you go through to justify this to yourselves, but I suspect you have no idea how silly it all seems to an objective observer. It even gets people like you to deny that your religion contains any commands to kill!
What I meant is that killing is human, not religiously. So theists and atheists kill, not just atheists- or not just theists. So it has been part of many religions and had been part of the old testamony- and of the history of the church. I never claimed that religions had been free of cruelty durting history.
If you think that we need to take the Bible word for word, you make a mistake a lot of theists seem to make too. I wrote elsewhere that this luckily is not a common view in Germany and that it is not logical to take the Bible literally.
And yes I do not see why this should be silly. I would think it is silly not to use the brain but simply to follow some textes which had been written some centuries ago. Why should I? I can read socrates and decide which of his ideas are still valuable nowadays and which we should not take into our own life nowadays. Why shouldn't this be true for other ancient ideas? The Bible is something to think about, not a list of commands. If it had been the later, it could had been much easier and in a much shorter text- you can basically make the ten commandments a little longer and you are done. So what is the sene in taking the Bible literally?
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Islam has its own commandments, and I have only a tiny knowledge of specifics from the Koran, so the only one I know of with some certainty is the requirement to kill apostates. Of course, we all know about fatwahs these days thanks to Rushdie....the fatwah against him was specifically issued by a very prominent and highly regarded religious figure. I'm sure you'll revert to the no true scotsman argument to say that such pronouncements don't reflect religious teachings either.
I'm sorry that religious mayhem is down recently, so I have only a limited number of current examples. But I have to laugh. You admit that some killers assert they are acting in furtherance of their religious belief, but you deny that religion plays a role in their actions. Clearly you know far more than they do about their motivations! No, the truth is that you have a fixed belief that religion is anti-killing and therefore anyone who claims to have killed for religious reasoning isn't really religious. You're a profound fool if you truly can't see where that logic is flawed.
Hmm, funny that it is impossible for me to write in a way that you understand what I would like to say. So think about this what you want to think. I think you misunderstood.
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Another recourse to straw man? Where did you learn to reason? If 10% of killings are caused by, say, beer ads on television, and 90% by other factors, does that mean that we should allow unrestricted beer ads? If religion is a tool used by leaders to get people to commit awful acts, and you seem to accept that it is, then surely the loss of religion as a force in society is a good thing, at least as far as reducing killings is concerned. Nobody....do I need to repeat this for you?...nobody suggests that religion is the only or even the single biggest factor in human conflict, especially on the personal scale.
So, if we take away one tool for leaders, they will start less cruelties? Just 10%? Do you really believe this? I think this is naive. I mean, if you just look at the last wars of the US f.e., which of them had religious reasons? Noone? I actually cannot recall any religious motivated war in the last decades, but I did not check this. Maybe the middle east conflict counts as such?
We agreed already that every party in a war claims God on their side. This helps leading people, seems to make dying easier- I do not know. But if you take away this tool, their are too many othes to use so that I do not share your hope that the end of religion will lower the rate of curelity.