Gem Windcaster, on 08 January 2010 - 01:08 AM, said:
H.D., on 07 January 2010 - 05:42 AM, said:
Gem said:
Where's the hypocrisy?
The monopoly on truth while not always owning absolute proof. However, if one doesn't monopolize on truth, then you can happily go along with your purty theories.
I bolded that bit in your first quote because I don't think it's true. I haven't been with this thread from the beginning, but I went back through it, and I came into it not long after you did. The point of this thread, such as it is, has been addressed before, and in fact, I found one post where I addressed it rather directly (I'm not sure if that link is doing what it's supposed to, but it's post #673), in response to you. Here is a quote from that post (and it is a long quote because it was a much longer post):
Terez said:
Gem said:
[...long spiel about Terez's religious history that is not unlike what she just fed to Powder in another thread...]
So that brings us back to the question of why we're even discussing this. Most atheists don't really care one way or the other who believes what. It only becomes a problem at certain points. (not trying to say you believe any of these things...in fact, I'm sure you probably don't believe some of them) "Hey, I believe in god!" Sure, that's cool, I don't, but whatever. "I believe Jesus died to save me from my sins!" That's great too....a bit elitist of you to think I'm going to hell because I can't make myself believe something that's so unbelievable, but whatever. "God hates fags!" Whooooah, you just went too far. Back up. "I bring my kids to church every Sunday!" Eh, I don't like it, but I can't stop you, so whatever. "Evolution is a hoax and we should stop teaching this dodgy science to kids in schools and teach them the Bible instead!" Whoooooooah. You just stepped way over the line.
The reason why atheists have a problem with religion is that it unequivocally encourages irrational thought, because it requires you to believe in something for which there is no evidence. The evidence of this (other than the lack of evidence itself) is in the way that religions have evolved over the thousands of years we can study. Beliefs that are shown to be untrue are eventually discarded, and even when religion itself isn't the source of those beliefs, religious folk are often the last to discard them. It's easy to see why.
The study of evolution isn't what religious people make it out to be. It's science, not a belief system. There are some things that we know about it. There are some things that we don't know about it. There are logical inferences we can make from the things that we DO know about it to fill in some of the "holes" in the theory. If future discoveries support the hypotheses that were made to fill in those holes, then that's great. If future discoveries contradict hypotheses that were made to fill in those holes, then that's great too. These hypotheses fall under the category of "beliefs that are easy to discard when evidence to the contrary is provided."
From a rational perspective, to fill in these "I don't know" holes with "god" is arbitrary. There is no evidence to support filling in those holes with god. It also has nothing to do with logical inferences based on what we know about how evolution works. It's arbitrary. And the belief in god itself falls under the category of "beliefs that are difficult to discard when evidence to the contrary is provided", as is evidenced (along with many other things which may or may not apply to you) by the fact that only people who believe in god have a problem with the theory of evolution.
I noticed when going through my old rep screens, re: the screenshot thread, that I got massive amounts of rep for one post in the Creation vs. Evolution thread, so I went to find it, and there it was. Maybe I will post those rep screens.
Gem said:
H.D., on 07 January 2010 - 05:42 AM, said:
Well yes, it has been my point all along, or one of my points rather, that the whole attack on creationism is futile and rather silly.
In some ways, it is, but it is not really the atheists who choose this debate. Science seeks to understand more about the world; there are just as many religious scientists as atheist/agnostic scientists, or at least almost as many. The debate is only a public issue because Christians, particularly fundamentalists, feel that their beliefs are being threatened by science, and they have even taken steps in a number of places to suppress the study of evolution for that reason. In the latter part of the 20th century, if anything, scientists are guilty of questioning their notions of truth excessively, rather than not enough. But Christians would ask us to question the theory of evolution for no more reason than that it contradicts their faith, something for which there is zero evidence. Scientists hardly need Christians to point out to them the things about evolution that they do not understand; it is their job to focus on those things, and their careers depend on results that can be duplicated and utilized for the betterment of society, without regard to belief systems. You have already expressed that you do not support Intelligent Design™, and that you believe that evolution should be taught in schools. That is good, and even applause-worthy for a Christian, but if your only purpose in this thread is to drive the point home that we do not understand everything about evolution, and that today's scientific truth might be negated in tomorrow's paradigm shift, then your effort is surely wasted, because we all know that. After all this time, you still don't seem to recognize the difference between an empirical belief system and a religious one. The former is a shifting system based on knowledge of any form; the latter claims an absolute truth that should theoretically not be provable or unprovable. The former is made up of beliefs that are easily discarded when evidence to the contrary is provided; the latter provides a motive to dismiss evidence to the contrary. It is only being discussed here because of those who seek to mix religion and science in the public sector, and you claim to be on our side in that particular debate.
This post has been edited by Terez: 08 January 2010 - 03:16 PM