Cookie182
Individui Superiore
This is a deep issue and one long debated.
If we are to live amongst each other in relative harmony, how best can we be "tolerant" particularly on political/legal issues where there is a clash of core beliefs. Is tolerance really viable or a hard-line left, relativist dream?
As an atheist and a professed humanist I am trying to work towards a core-value framework where I approach people on all sides of lifes deepest questions with a baseline level of respect, notwithstanding how "illogical" or scientifically invalid I may see their belief as being. In light of discussions I have had with atheist and theists alike, do you actually enjoy real-life arguments? Those who thrive (particularly on the atheistic side here) do you enjoy attacking the theistic framework due to ego-creedance or are you able to hold a logical, well-paced discussion on theology without it becoming heated? Conversely, it can be very difficult, given that many theistic viewpoints are inherently intolerant when fully undertaken- ie A Conservative Christian meets an atheistic (yet trying to be tolerant) homosexual.
Is it best to avoid these discussions altogether, to accept that a variety of spiritual beliefs are what in many ways defines mankind, that they give comfort to those who are seeking and (in general promote good works etc charities).
This seems dandy, but how do we then solve the issue of religious groups lobbying to make issues such as abortion illegal, creationism in schools, Islamists rioting over the use of "free-speech"?
How do you approach religious tolerance? Is open-minded philosophical criticism which strikes at the core questions of theology (eg questioning whether God exists) rightfully "intolerant" or simply a requirement for a rational, modern society with an inherent value for free-speech? Do you view the notion of religious liberty as also entailing the ability to live a life fully uninfluenced by religious agenda- in our laws, our education systems, our government policies?
Essentially, can we all live together happily, yet sharing starkly different core-value systems, in a practical sense? Or must one eventually avail and repression persist?
If we are to live amongst each other in relative harmony, how best can we be "tolerant" particularly on political/legal issues where there is a clash of core beliefs. Is tolerance really viable or a hard-line left, relativist dream?
As an atheist and a professed humanist I am trying to work towards a core-value framework where I approach people on all sides of lifes deepest questions with a baseline level of respect, notwithstanding how "illogical" or scientifically invalid I may see their belief as being. In light of discussions I have had with atheist and theists alike, do you actually enjoy real-life arguments? Those who thrive (particularly on the atheistic side here) do you enjoy attacking the theistic framework due to ego-creedance or are you able to hold a logical, well-paced discussion on theology without it becoming heated? Conversely, it can be very difficult, given that many theistic viewpoints are inherently intolerant when fully undertaken- ie A Conservative Christian meets an atheistic (yet trying to be tolerant) homosexual.
Is it best to avoid these discussions altogether, to accept that a variety of spiritual beliefs are what in many ways defines mankind, that they give comfort to those who are seeking and (in general promote good works etc charities).
This seems dandy, but how do we then solve the issue of religious groups lobbying to make issues such as abortion illegal, creationism in schools, Islamists rioting over the use of "free-speech"?
How do you approach religious tolerance? Is open-minded philosophical criticism which strikes at the core questions of theology (eg questioning whether God exists) rightfully "intolerant" or simply a requirement for a rational, modern society with an inherent value for free-speech? Do you view the notion of religious liberty as also entailing the ability to live a life fully uninfluenced by religious agenda- in our laws, our education systems, our government policies?
Essentially, can we all live together happily, yet sharing starkly different core-value systems, in a practical sense? Or must one eventually avail and repression persist?
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