Scarabin, on 2014-February-27, 00:28, said:
I think there is a wide gulf between moderates and fanatics. Imo moderates are capable of rational thought, fanatics are not. Thus I expect moderates to be capable of changing their beliefs and to be tolerant of others' beliefs.
I think you continue to miss the point.
A fanatic surrenders completely to the irrational, to the point that in a recent television documentary a minister said, with all sincerity, that if the bible said that 2+2 = 5, he would start by believing it and then would perform whatever rationalizations would be required to accommodate the appearance of the world with that revealed truth.
The religious moderate would, I assume, laugh at that, and rationalize the bible, presumably arguing that the biblical arithmetic was allegorical.
The rational person would also laugh at it and conclude that this statement was some evidence of the irrationality of the religious belief embodied in the bible: note I say 'some evidence', not 'proof'.
The religious moderate, confronted as any religious moderate who has read the bible has been with a multitude of demonstrably false or extraordinarily improbable statements, including some that are contradicted elsewhere in the same bible, preserves a belief in the ultimate validity of the core fantasies of the religion by finding excuses and performing either mental gymnastics or by simply denying the existence of the evidence.
The rational secularist sees all of the improbabilities and contradictions and concludes that it is all a crock, being an amalgam of myths, legends, stories and so on from many traditions, manipulated, selected, translated (numerous times) by people with an agenda that includes the obtaining and expansion of power over the credulous.
The difference between the religious fanatic and the religious moderate is thus merely one of degree....the difference is quantitative, not qualitative. The difference between the rational secularist and all religious believers, of all degrees of fanaticism or moderation, is truly qualitative. The one founds his world view on superstition, the other on evidence.
The moderate may and indeed will use evidence-based thinking in many aspects of his life, but at the core of his world view the superstition remains, and threatens to influence every decision he makes.
Moreover, since the idiocies within the bible are so readily apparent, and yet so few religious moderates become atheists, it is plain to see that the religious moderate will not, in fact, change his beliefs based on evidence...at least, not very often. Were it otherwise, religious moderates would be a tiny minority. Instead, they can pretend to be 'liberal' and 'open-minded' while still living their lives based on superstition and fantasy as their core values and beliefs.
That's one reason why religious moderation is not an admirable trait.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari