Craig B
My point is that it is not the existence of these ideas in holy texts (for equally deplorable ideas exist in other texts) that poses any threat, but the occurrence of behaviour inspired by these texts.
I missed the part where Dr Harris denied that equally deplorable ideas exist elsewhere.
Perhaps you and I understand
threat differently.
Threat, as far as I know, refers to the
seriously possible occurrence of future destructive behavior. The actual occurrence of causally related destructive behavior is the
realizaton of a threat when it occurs, and becomes
experience afterwards, a basis upon which one may assess the
gravity of the threat for consideration in future decision making.
Example The idea in the Old Testament that appears to counsel that Jews should kill gay Jews is deplorable. At the present time, I assess the threat from observant Jews to a Jewish lesbian friend of mine as failing to meet the threshhold of a serious possibility of realization, consistent with my (lack of) experience of the threat's enactment by living Jews.
On the other hand, the
idea poses a threat. It has, from time to time during my life span, found a congenial home in the minds of some Gentiles, and has been realized, with fatal consequences. Now, a full threat analysis includes many factors, and I do not greatly fear for my friend's life from this quarter. Nevertheless, if I were asked, then I would advise her not to display overt affection for her spouse when walking through certain neighborhoods.
In a civil society, as I understand and use the term, any married couple may show moderate affection for each other when in public, without fear of mayhem. The idea in question infringes on this. The idea, then, poses a special threat to civil society, as I understand the terms used. ("Special" means specific to the idea, in this case because the idea counsels a course of beahvior, and despite being overtly directed to an audience largely uninterested in implementing the idea.) Fortunately, the gravity of the threat is small (in my estimation), based on where my friend lives, works and ordinarily visits - all factors unrelated to the content of the idea itself.
Questions Am I fairly described as antisemitic because I profess in public that one or more ideas in the Jewish Bible pose a special threat to civil society?
Suppose I were now accused of antisemitism for what I said in the example. Suppose I replied, after first making remarks showing my awareness that Jews have been discriminated against for being Jews, "There is no antisemitism." Would it be more reasonable to say that I contradicted myself, or that the
scope of my statement was solely in reference to my earlier remarks, which I am now defending against what I believe to be an undeserved criticism?