articulett
Banned
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2005
- Messages
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If it's the statement I think it is, what Dawkins is saying is that the mindset of religious belief, the unconditional acceptance of that which cannot be observed, and the encouragement of others to engage in that behavior by moderate believers is what enables the fundamentalists to act as they do. The only difference between moderate belief and fundamentalist belief is how far you take it. As articulett has said, the meme that faith is good is the underlying cause of fundamentalism.
And it's the underlying theme of most religions. It's a general paradigm that we are taught not to speak up against or question. If no one talks about it then everyone gets the idea that people are in agreement with this notion that there are divine truths and that faith and feeling can access them. We never discuss if that's true, much less rather we should be telling kids and trusting people that it is. And once you've agreed that there are divine truths, you have no right to say that your truth is more likely to be truer than another's conflicting divine truth--because you've both built your truths on a faulty premise.
A materialist could say to the hijackers, "how do you know that consciousness can survive death?" But a theist has already agreed that it can-- so who cares whether the theist thinks your heavenly plan is unlikely... their heavenly plan is equally unlikely--their god isn't the true one. A rationalist says, "there is no evidence for any life after death--you are trusting people whom you should examine more closely", but a theist can only say, "your religion is wrong and mine is right" with nothing to back it up with.
A theist makes a bargain with the devil-- in exchange for not probing his special delusions too closely, he agrees not to look too closely into anyone else's delusions... and then the ugliness festers underneath sacred platitudes.
It doesn't matter to me that most faiths are harmless--what matters to me is that we live in a world where it's really too dangerous to continue propping up this notion that "faith is good". What is it good for? Where are the stellar examples of people made fabulous by faith? It's weird, because people really do believe that they'd be wanton and immoral without religion...so maybe such people do need it-- but the evidence sure isn't there to show that this is the case. And if religion worked for boosting morality, would there be any pedophiliac clergy? Any witch hunts? Any suicide bombings? Would we need prisons and jails and laws and rules that involve rights and protecting the life liberty and property of others?

An apologist "covers for" religion unknowingly it seems-- the whole "faith is good" meme-- or at least, that it's harmless. I feel like they are the people on this forum running to derail threads to call people bad for daring to criticize faith...pretending they said "all religions" whenever they speak of religions in general. 

