The_root_of_all_evil said:
Most of the debate on Christianity and other sects goes this way.
There's a reasonable precedent for believing in a higher power until we can explain all aspects of the known universe (Which Science is well behind on), and as soon as we do explain it, we become the higher power.
On the Atheist side, firm conviction there is NOT a God is also a -theism, and therefore a religion, chockful of all the help books, stupidity but good people that populate all the rest of the Religions.
The battles come over proselytizing to others what they SHOULD believe in. Now as long as Perry keeps his mouth shut on that, I'd guess he's welcome.
No, it's a
belief, maybe unfounded, but which totally forbids the divine essence. It can certainly
not be theism in any shape or form.
Cheeze_Pavilion said:
Umm, when did he present anything of his own in there as being a theory in need of verification?
God creating the universe is a theory, nothing more.
Therefore, he goes through a lenghty explanation of the hows and whys of theory failures and limits in regards of tests, a constant verification against the fact. Part of a theory is that it can
predict what will happen, and if verified, the theory becomes superior to others.
Thus far, religion keeps making claims out of the blue, but all fail at step 1.
The transition to faith is made when you still think a theory is true, but without a shred of evidence and capability to prove it, and assert its predictability.
This is actually a really complex question. Let's look at it from a different point of view.
There's an insane guy who thinks he's the Emperor of All Humanity. He wears a Burger King crown to demonstrate this. He thinks we are all his slaves.
Yet he treats us all as equals in every way, shape, and form in civil society. He thinks his title of Emperor has no validity in any court of law. He seeks no political power based on his title.
Would we call such a person 'intolerant' just because he considers us all his slaves yet treats us with complete tolerance? Is it intolerance to judge someone according to a metaphysical standard they reject if there are no real world consequences to that judgment?
This is a bad case. He's simply a nutjob who thinks we are his pawns, but is not capable of enforcing his ridiculous idea of superiority against the laws of the nation he lives in.
The Hell concept is a wholely different affair, and establishes a undodgeable law which will apply to all, nevermind what happens, and those who didn't agree (non-believers) will be tormented for eternity.
This is not better than any intolerant and tyrannic shit you hear from the fundie front, no matter the part of the world it comes from.
It should be quickier if people could be honest with themselves for a second, and really wonder why they believe in religion X. I'm sure, if they do their job well, that they'd would realize that it has little to do with a proper and well nurtured reasonning, but more to do with flocking (bandwagon style), mystical awe for merry tales, fallacy of age, fallacy of quantity, feeling of security in believing something assumed as "strong", and in most cases, being forced to believe in it during the first parts of childhood.