Oook!, in another thread, asserts:
quote:
People should be able to believe whatever they want to believe, as long as it doesn't impose on anybody else. If people want to believe in invisible ninjas that's their look out. If people want to believe that the evidence for God is presented every time somebody publishes a paper in Cell, fine by me.
My belief is that the existence of God is irrelevant to how you treat people, and how we interpret evidence. It may not be a million miles away from your beliefs, but I just can't discount the possibility.
In the post-9/11 world, we have a right to be more critical of the religious beliefs of others, especially as they pertain to the believer's sacred mission on Earth. Even bigots reserve the right to believe themselves superior to other races or classes, insofar as they realize that there are anti-discrimination laws that have to be obeyed in civil society. However, religious believers can declare that "the Lord hath made folly of the wisdom of this world," and decide to disregard secular evidence or authority in order to fulfill the will of their God.
We're living in a world where religious belief is increasingly intolerant and apocalyptic, and the weapons available to the believers are ever more destructive. We're beset by people in our own nation and around the world who not only believe in a vengeful God who commands their obedience, but also feel that violence is the best way to serve this deity. There is little hope of appealing to the rational faculties of such people, since they have been taught that faith is stronger than knowledge.
Most view these psychopaths as merely the lunatic fringe of the faithful, separate from the majority of believers who hold their faith in a reasonable and critical manner. However, the apparatus of religion feeds and reinforces this mindset and its attendant behavior. The believer that condemns abortion as genocide has no right to deny the responsibility he bears for the violent behavior of a faithful avenger who decides to shoot people at a family planning clinic. Believers who accept their Scripture as the word of the Almighty must bear the blame for violence perpetrated by those who obey its message of hatred against non-believers.
The mindset of faith, especially faith in invisible deities and rewards in the afterlife, is not conducive to critical thinking or responsible discourse. I assert that a person's faith is indeed relevant to his ability or willingness to treat people with tolerance and goodwill, and certainly affects the importance he places on empirical evidence.
regards,
Esteban Hambre