Beady
Philosopher
Thank you. However, I contend that the "Baloney Detection Kit" is not a rulebook for atheists in the same manner or to the same extent that the Bible is for Christians.
You asked for a rulebook for critical thinking, not a bible, and I gave you one. Personally, I feel the ties of reason that bind me to the rules of critical thinking are stronger than the ties of blind faith that bound me to religion. For one thing, I made a conscious and reasoned choice to adopt the rules of critical thinking as a way to conduct my life. I cannot see how it would be reasonable to even temporarily or partially abandon these rules. It seems to me that to disavow the rules of critical thinking is to eliminate any substantive difference between you and a religious believer. To do so as a matter of convenience is hypocrisy.
The Baloney Detection Kit is a compilation and distillation of these rules. No, it is not divinely inspired, neither is it the final word on the subject, nor is it immune to revision. It is, however, a basic toolkit and framework for anyone attempting to construct a solid and focused argument for either himself or someone else, based on reason and logic.
Yes, it's possible to conduct a reasoned and logical argument without consulting the BDK but, how did you put it...?
If I'd known about this then I wouldn't have needed to struggle all those years on my own shedding my unreasoned belief in religion.
BTW, the thought occurs to me, since you apparently have never even heard of this booklet before, and are also apparently completely unfamiliar with its contents, are you really in a position to make a contention about what it is and is not?