
Originally Posted by
IndiReloaded
Great example for those who question whether Buddhism is a religion, lol.
Appeal to authority, right in what I bolded. You just forgot the 'belief' part, which is that those guys believe in karma & reincarnation.

Worship of God should not necessarily lead to appeal to authority. Many people worship from the comfort of their own homes without needing anyone in between.

Originally Posted by
IndiReloaded
And this is a perfect example of religion being used to manipulate the masses. Terrific. Lol, Marx had it right afterall.
That's one way to look at it I guess. Though if read the benefits it provided as well "Standards of social behaviour" (I.e. laws), ties between the "individual and community" and "preserved national identity" at the time that identity was under attack. I think lot of positive elements were provided by Religion in Edo period of Japan.

Originally Posted by
IndiReloaded
Try youtube or the science podcasts. BTW, have you seen cdk007's (he's a neuroscientist, fyi) vids on youtube. Also very good.
Thanks Indi. I followed OV's link (Thanks OV) but I don't have speakers here. I will listen to it later on it sounds interesting.
I read a bit on Dawkins and although a lot of what he says does make sense, his points of view also have flaws and he's not without critics who also make valid points. I don't want to make a book, but I will put some that I found interesting on "God Delusion":
"Writing in Harper's, Pulitzer Prize winning novelist and essayist Marilynne Robinson criticises the "pervasive exclusion of historical memory in Dawkins's view of science," with particular reference to scientific eugenic theories and practices. She argues that Dawkins has a superficial knowledge of the Bible and accuses him of comparing only the best of science with the worst of religion: "if religion is to be blamed for the fraud done in its name, then what of science? Is it to be blamed for the Piltdown hoax, for the long-credited deceptions having to do with cloning in South Korea? If by 'science' is meant authentic science, then 'religion' must mean authentic religion, granting the difficulties in arriving at these definitions." Robinson suggests that Dawkins' arguments are not properly called scientific but are reminiscent of logical positivism, notwithstanding Dawkins' "simple-as-that, plain-as-day approach to the grandest questions, unencumbered by doubt, consistency, or countervailing information."
"Some reviewers were highly critical of Dawkins' lack of scholarship on theology and the philosophy of religion. Dawkins is explicitly dismissive of theology in the God Delusion, and in the words of John Cornwell "there is hardly a serious work of philosophy of religion cited in his extensive bibliography",[25] going so far as to suggest that "[Dawkins] would substitute a series of case-notes on senile dementia for King Lear."[26] This sentiment was echoed by other reviewers, from theologians, such as Alister McGrath,[27] to scientists otherwise sympathetic to Dawkins' position, such as H. Allen Orr.[28] One of the most emphatic formulations of this objection was by Marxist literary critic Terry Eagleton in the London Review of Books: What, one wonders, are Dawkins's views on the epistemological differences between Aquinas and Duns Scotus? Has he read Eriugena on subjectivity, Rahner on grace or Moltmann on hope? Has he even heard of them? Or does he imagine like a bumptious young barrister that you can defeat the opposition while being complacently ignorant of its toughest case?"
Skeptic Michael Shermer, describes the book as "a powerful polemic against the infusion of religion into nearly every nook and cranny of public life. However he is not convinced by Dawkins' argument that without religion, there would be "no suicide bombings, no 9/11, ...", suggesting that many of the evils that atheists attribute to religion alone are primarily driven by political motives.
Michael Skapinker in the Financial Times, while finding that "Dawkins' attack on the creationists is devastatingly effective", considers him "maddeningly inconsistent." He argues that, since Dawkins accepts that current theories about the universe (such as quantum theory) may be "already knocking at the door of the unfathomable" and that the universe may be "not only queerer than we suppose, but queerer than we can suppose", "the thought of how limited our comprehension is should introduce a certain diffidence into our attempted refutations of those who think they have the answer".
"Marek Kohn in The Independent suggests that in this book "passions are running high, arguments are compressed and rhetoric inflated. The allusion to Chamberlain, implicitly comparing religion to the Nazi regime, is par for the course." He also argues that "another, perhaps simpler, explanation for the universality and antiquity of religion is that it has conferred evolutionary benefits on its practitioners that outweigh the costs."
I also found some flaws in Dawkin's logic, for example:
"Chapter 5 explores the roots of religion and why religion is ubiquitous across human cultures. Dawkins advocates the "theory of religion as an accidental by-product – a misfiring of something useful"
Dawkin's holds this point of view without assessing the reasons why Religion was historically so effective and that Religion may in fact be an evolutionary tool that provides people with additional cultural/tribal adoptation capabilities over other groups, instead of being "an accidental by-product - a misfiring of something useful.
In chapter 6 the subject of morality is discussed, with Dawkins maintaining that we do not need religion to be good. Instead, our morality has a Darwinian explanation: altruistic genes, selected through the process of evolution, give people natural empathy. He asks, "would you commit murder, rape or robbery if you knew that no God existed?" He argues that very few people would answer "yes", undermining the claim that a God is needed to make us behave morally.
I view that Dawkin's intentionally provided an example of extremes to confuse the reader. Murder, rape and robbery are rare occurances by any standard when you compare the minority of population that participates in these acts over majority (Unless there is war). But had he asked instead ""would you be more selfish, greedy, lustful and prideful if you knew that no God existed, that survival of the fittest was the meaning of life and noone was keeping track of what you did?" Would the answer be different for many people? Personally I can see a lot of people saying "yes".
Because the way I see it, if the meaning of life is "Survival of the fittest" and "Natural selection" as Dawkin's sees it, isn't it not only right to be; (selfish so you further your natural selection goals of being fitter than others, to be greedy so you acquire more than others to be in a better position from evolutionary persepctive, be lustful and spread the seed with your genes to secure the evolution of your progeny and be prideful of your fitness over those who are weak who basicly deserve anything what's coming to them due to but their evolutionary weakness), but the whole point of existance?" And if it is, then what kind of a society are we to have following these as moral standards?
In this regard I would like to post a couple of lines from another father of Atheism some of whose views I support and agree with.
God is dead. God remains dead. And we have killed him. How shall we comfort ourselves, the murderers of all murderers? What was holiest and mightiest of all that the world has yet owned has bled to death under our knives: who will wipe this blood off us? What water is there for us to clean ourselves? What festivals of atonement, what sacred games shall we have to invent? Is not the greatness of this deed too great for us? Must we ourselves not become gods simply to appear worthy of it?
– Nietzsche, The Gay Science, Section
In his book "The Gay Science" Nietzsche discusses the paradox of not death of God as a deity but as a human kind cultural symbol of "absolute good" towards which people need to strive to be better people. He describes the paradox of elimnating a symbol of "Absolute good" without replacing it with something else as effective and as efficeint in turning people into better people. If God is eliminated from our culture, what symbol of absolute good should replace it? For what reason should people (out of their own free will) be virtuous instead of selfish? Should people not become Gods themselves to replace him?
While this God was the ultimate expression of other-worldly values and the instincts that gave birth to those values, belief in that God nevertheless did give life meaning for a time. The time has come when serious human beings can no longer believe in God, however — God is dead, meaning that the idea of God can no longer provide values. With the sole source of values no longer capable of providing those values, there is a real danger of nihilism and state of anomie.
– Nietzsche, Übermensch
These are the main questions that Atheism for me doesn't seem to answer.
Last edited by Mish; 06-02-08 at 07:02 AM.
Don't cry, don't regret and don't blame
Weak find the whip, willing find freedom
Towards the sun, carry your name
In warm hands you are given
Ask the wind for the way
Uncertainty's gone, your path will unravel
Accept all as it is and do not blame
God or the Devil
~Born to Live - Mavrik~