Slight difference, my comment was a direct reference to you. Were you commenting directly to me? It helps if you put my name on. I'm ignoring a lot of background attacks, trying to address all of them is more than I have time for.
Yet you are still not denying the accusation. You are talking around it a lot but it is patently false what you characterized as elevatorgate.
So you removed two words, which alter the meaning of the sentence, for terseness.. I find that hard to believe.
Or you lack an answer but refuse to walk back a statement.
I doubt that,
Sure they were. I engaged you directly on what you posted. I used you as an example of what is wrong with the culture on this thread. However I do agree that the exchange should be a fair one and I'm happy to answer your questions. (Within reason, asking me to mind read others is out.)
Don't whine about walls, large posts are necessary to convey large amounts of information and you are hardly following your own advice with a single question on a single topic. Also given the nature of this threadnaught going back to previous pages is labor intensive and risks losing information, that is why I quote you fully.
As to emotions being valid tools of thinking, emotions are an unavoidable aspect of human thought. We can attempt to suppress them but this makes them act subconsciously. It strikes me that it is better to be aware of them, realize them and work with them. I think Quinn made great points about how empathy is only available if you allow for emotional thinking. I do agree with several posters I saw that one should not get carried away by emotion, however I see denying emotion as harmful in much the same way.
Given the way you have danced arround this topic I don't know that it's worth it. However it seems pretty simple to me. When you attack the religion of marginalized people you are attacking them and their culture. If you are white and in the US or Europe you are making that attack down an axis of privilege, and that's bad. Focus on the religious issues in your own culture. Let the atheists in their culture work on their religion. No good will come of attacking before things are evened out.
Sylvia sums it up pretty nicely.
Now I know someone mentioned that Islam is not marginalized because of fast growing and big numbers. In Islamic countries, I agree Islam is not marginalized, locally, assuming you are talking of the branch popular in any given place, being shia, for instance, in sunni territory is pretty damn awful.
However here in the states, being muslim is a very marginalized position. Look at all the nonsense with the "Ground Zero mosque" or any number of other attacks.
Now there is your olive branch, lets see some honest responses to the questions I have placed before you.
Thanks for the olive branch. Accusing me of lying makes it wither a bit, though.
I scanned your post for questions and only saw one: "Were you commenting directly to me?" My answer is no. Point taken.
Most of your other remarks I've either already addressed, or I'd be stating the obvious if I addressed them. The two words I purportedly eliminated to misrepresent a quote are too far back for me to bother to locate in this long thread. It's your burden to support your claim.
You said, originally, emotions were valuable intellectual tools, yet in your response to me challenging that, you reworded it as "valid tools of thinking."
Why? (serious question. It comes across as a backpedal) Skeptical and critical thinking requires being aware of all data, including emotional data. The original context, as best I recall, had to do with the emphasis applied to fear, such as the discomfort about being invited in an elevator for coffee. Fear is the most powerful emotion, and it's well established in evolutionary psychology that survival is helped more by false positives than by false negatives. Emotions are emotional tools. The emotional part of the human brain is virtually identical to the emotional part of the rat brain. We need to be aware of emotions, but putting excessive weight in the emotional interpretation of reality given to us by our rat brain violates an explicit goal of Atheism Plus: to use skepticism and critical thinking.
Regarding the religions of brown people being off limits (Sybil's "axis of privelege" statement strikes me as a
bare assertion fallacy) makes me flash back to Dawkins' "Root of All Evil." He used all three Abrahamic religions, including the "religion of brown people," as examples of religion's harm. I don't care that Dawkins views it from an axis of privilege. It doesn't make him wrong. He is privileged to not be under the mind control of any religion, including brown peoples'. More than that, not being in the axis of the religion itself makes it easier to see how harmful it is. Dawkins obviously cares about the well being of all people whatever levels of melanin their skins produce. This is the axis I am on as well. I wish you were, too.
Ceepolk's edict resembles for me the consequence of racists who shrug their shoulders at black-on-black violence. The privileged have knowledge that can help the underprivileged, but should back off because of ancient colonialism and racism? Nope, I won't buy into that.