Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
Critical thinking is a process, Claus. The conclusions people come to when they use good critical thinking skills are not absolute or fixed in stone. So it is the skills that matter, not the conclusions.Skeptigirl,
My question was about how you would control who gets to be in this critical thinking movement. How will you do that? Make it a condition that you are an atheist? Take a test? Pledge, in public, with your hand on...presumably not the Bible, but what, then?...that you are now an Atheist?
I'm genuinely curious. What constitutes a member of this Movement of Critical Thinkers? What do they have to live up to? What are the tenets?
They have to be Atheists. What else?
But I am not going to give a pass to god beliefs as being compatible with good critical thinking skills. If you use the principles of evaluating the evidence, you come to the conclusion the Biblical god is as mythical as Zeus and Pele. Unless you are caught up in some god belief, it is a no brainer. If one is indoctrinated into one god belief or another, then one cannot see that their god beliefs are as mythical as any other god beliefs. An objective observer has absolutely no problem seeing that they are myths one and all.
