You said that it was necessary to abandon reason in order to do good deeds. At least, that is how I (and apparently other posters) interpreted this exchange:
The 'appeal to the people' fallacy. I'm not repeating what I said before about reason.
If that is not what you meant, please explain what you did mean when you accused me of slighting people who do good deeds by saying that those who abandon reason usually go astray.
First of all (again) I never said that people of faith have abandoned reason. It's been obvious throughout your posts that
you regard people of faith as having abandoned reason. You've said as much before, as have several others (hence your fallacious appeal). You then equate that with going astray, which at least is logical given your opinion on the matter of faith. You lost your own faith when you realised that your prayers weren't working (for you). Of course, you still have faith - but now it's faith in reason. You may find it makes a good servant but a tyrannical master.
Once you accept that it is possible to receive communication from God via unverifiable revelations (your own, or those recorded in your scripture) you open a very dangerous door.
There is no alternative, other than to live in a self-made shell (or is it 'hell'?), cut off from the flow of life. Life IS dangerous, but to close the door on a meaningful life is to substitute 'dangerous' for 'hopeless'.
You have no grounds for saying that the person who is moved to volunteer at a homeless shelter by a religious experience received a valid communication, but the person who is moved to strap themselves into a suicide vest and detonate it in a crowded place did not.
People generally strap bombs to themselves for
political reasons, according to McGrath (who quotes the latest scholarly analyses to support that statement, although it wasn't hard to guess) although they may use a particular reading of their scriptures to justify it. The truth is, people very often do what they want, whether religious or not, then if religious abuse their own scriptures to justify it. That is how human beings behave at their worst. Incidentally, the Wahhabi sect that came out of Saudi Arabia and is allegedly responsible for much of the suicide bombings and city attacks is NOT representative of Islam. And let's not forget the long and dishonourable role of the USA, that evil empire, in the creation of the disaster that is the middle east today, most recently, their role in the creation of ISIS. So lets not hear any more soundbites about 'suicide bombers'. We all created them.
Either all such revelations are sufficient justification to believe and act on the information received or none are. I'm sticking with none. So does the law, which is why "God told me to do it" is not a valid defence.
Suicide bombers act because they are asked to do it as part of the campaign their organisation wages. The implication that someone received a 'revelation' that he was to go out and blow up a shopping precinct is a fantasy concocted in your head, and (re your
argumentum ad populum), the heads of many people who really just hate and fear Muslims - or religion in general - and have little inclination to really understand the forces that operate in our world. That's not to say that someone
couldn't receive such a revelation. I'm not saying that at all. I'm saying that the motivation for suicide bombings and the like is primarily political.