Thor 2
Philosopher
Ya, ya, I've seen that sort of hair-splitting. I expect (that is, I know) that there are dogmatic atheists out there who claim to know that no gods exist. Since the same people tend to say that religion is an unfalsifiable claim, they have a small dilemma.
There certainly is a lot of "hair-splitting" going on here.
I, without shame, admit I believe religious indoctrination is child abuse. I would like parents not to pass their religious affliction on to their children. I think this is a big ask however. In an ideal situation parents should say to their children - "Well I believe this but you are free to believe whatever you will." Does this seem plausible? Do you think they would get instructions, from the pulpit, to do this?
Perhaps the indoctrination in schools can be addressed though. We should be able to outlaw (even in religious schools), the practice of teaching, that such and such a piece of religious dogma is true, at the expense of knowledge gained from scientific enquiry.
Personally, I'm fine with teaching children the essentials of all important religions. Preferably as unbiased as possible.
Hans
I wholeheartedly go along with this. As an atheist, did instruct my children about the existence of the major religions. I always mentioned my personal lack of belief in any of them. If that makes me a dogmatic atheist, so be it.
