Joobz,
Actions aren't sufficient. The important question is whether those actions are justified or arbitrary.
That's a mere assertion. (using admittedly vauge terms) You can do good things for bad reasons, and be rewarded by society for those things. You can also do bad things for good reasons, and be punished accordingly. Society reacts to the actions not the thoughts. We will sometimes excuse bad actions for right reasons, but we do not punish good things for wrong reasons.
As I said before, until thought crimes become a reality, good citizenry is defined by action not thought.
I suppose that I am trying to avoid a discussion of any particular individual's psychology; we're all hypocrites in one way or another. That's why I refused to comment on those examples and wanted to avoid a discussion of my opinion. It's the larger question of what's meaningful and true that interests me more.
This is irrelevant. Saying you hold to a set of governing axioms because they work in your best interests is not hypocritical or inconsistent. You keep attempting to create a staw-atheist and claim that atheists in general can't be good. This is just bizarre.
Can atheists have a justified, true belief in something more than themselves?
yes. See ALL of FZ's posts.
And I do see your point, though it raises the question: can any kind of government, other than a natural rights republic, be seen to be good? One cannot, as I said before, be a good citizen of a country that isn't itself good. Is a utilitarian form of government good in the common use of the word?
That wasn't your point and you keep shifting it.
Many atheists are secular humanists. Why not ask if secular humanist is a good form of government?
Does a belief in a natural rights republic require the kind of belief that, like belief in a God or gods, an atheist must reject? I think so.
You can believe in axioms that fit the natural law that you keep refering to. As such, atheists can indeed believe in it.
By the by, from a utilitarian point of view, countries that are more religious tend to have citizens who are happier and wealthier. I can site the studies. Obviously, someone is going to scream "correlation isn't causation" which is fair, but that's social science for you.
No, I'll just scream that your source doesn't say that.
from "
working paper at his web page
."
For instance...
your paper sourced said:
The data reveal an overall pattern in which economic development is associated with less religiosity, measured by church attendance or religious beliefs.
less religion = more economic development...
and
your paper sourced said:
Table 2 shows marginally significant negative relations between church
attendance and life expectancy. The estimated coefficient of 2.2 (s.e.=1.2) in column 1
means that a fall in the reciprocal of life expectancy by 0.08 (its sample standard
deviation) is associated with lower monthly church attendance by about 4 percentage
points.
less church attendance = longer life..
Although to be fair, the paper does explain that the elderly do believe in religion more, which contradicts this finding. As you said, correlation and causation aren't the same thing.
But I'll leave you with this bit as well.
Finally, the inverse association between urbanization and church attendance is consistent with the view that church services have to compete in urban areas with many other leisure activities, such as museums, theatres, and political organizations. A possible explanation for this urban/rural pattern is that economies of scale are important for many
social organizations but are less significant for houses of worship. Even sparsely populated rural towns can sustain a local congregation.
in other words, when people have other fun things to do, they don't go to church. That seems rather contrary to your claims.
Well, after that little sidepoint, which has no real bearing on the argument, I ask that you answer my question below.
joobz said:
You've admited then that atheists can believe in something more than themselves (although you are only permitting utalitarianism for now) and are therefore capable of being good citizens of some government form.
As such, your original claim, "atheists can't be good citizens" was proven false.
...
So, shall we admit that this is where we currently stand in the argument?
It is difficult to move a discussion forward until we agree upon what we are discussing. If you agree, than we can move forward into discussing why atheists could be good in a natural rights republic.