Re: intolerance Christians vs. atheists
A few comments on things which have been said in this thread:
Nietzsche said that, 'God is dead' or in other words, the Christian worldview with in modern culture has died. And he said because intellectuals and philosophers killed God in the 19th century the 20th century would be the bloodiest century in human history. Nietzsche never lived long enough to find out, but he was right. 10's of millions would die under communist (atheist) Russia alone!
This was written in the original article that was posted and I think that, in itself, it represents pretty poor reasoning. For analogies sake (please don't start a global warming debate) I think it's worth looking at the image in this link:
http://www.venganza.org/piratesarecool4.jpg
The graph shows a correlation between a decreasing numbers of pirates and increasing global temperature. The key thing to realise is that correlation is not the same as causation. Similarly we could examine a correlation between increasing atheism and an increasing number of deaths in the world. Could it not be the case that the large number of deaths was facillitated by a larger population (similar to the way number of deaths from disease can increase with a growing population... which is why we use rates) or perhaps by 'improved' warfare technology (guns and bombs facilitate mass killing)?
Also, an increasing number of deaths and increasing atheism could arise from a similar source - e.g. we could postulate that scientific advancement a) gives us more technology which allows for more killing and b) provides theories which challenge religion and cause more people to become atheists. In any case, I'm not offering a proof that there is no causation between atheism/deaths, but I do think that the above quoted claim should be taken with a grain of salt.
S1M0 said:
Blind faith justified by theological reasoning and assumption.
Perhaps I don't understand blind faith, but I thought that it was unjustified belief by definition. Feel free to throw a contrary definition at me.
ellen.louise said:
I've never been that interested in science: thus I don't actually know that much about evolution theory, etc. But I don't think this kind of stuff has ever been solidly proven. Really, atheists take a lot of it on faith: they beleive in science, or they just never think about it. People who beleive in different gods do the same thing: take it on faith. I'm not stupid, and I'm a strong person. I just... also beleive in God.
When you venture into the philosophy of science you'll find that most people realise that 100% proof isn't obtainable - i.e. there's always a chance that we might be wrong. Given this I think you need to examine what you mean by 'solidly proven'. Statistically, many scientists are happy to claim a correlation between two things if the probability that they are observing a false correlation is <.05. The big difference between scientific and religious beliefs (in general, I'm sure that exceptions exist) is that science requires beliefs to be scrutinised and backed up with evidence. Now, note that this evidence is not absolute, but that in many cases it can be
strong.
The problem with god is that, by nature, god is often seen as outside of the physical realm, making god a fairly difficult subject for empirical analysis. While I do agree with you that there are some things that atheists take on faith, I still think you make a mistake in equating scientific belief with religious belief.
bshoc said:
Evolution is supposed to work for ALL parts, in fact thats the only way it can work, since nothing can prove evolution in a lifetime or even over tens of recorded lifetimes. I believe the concept is everything evolves from something, thus if something appears with nothing before it, it calls for the re-evaluation of not only the Cambrian period, but ALL periods. Evolution is nothing by a theory, as you said yourself...
What of the fact that we do seem to be able to observe evolution in some cases. In particular we see it at a cellular and microbiological level (because the life spans / rates of replication of those organisms are so short/rapid). The development of antibiotic resistance amongst microbes is a strong example of the way environmental pressures can select for certain characteristics within a population. Doesn't this show that evolution works in
some cases? Even if we can't find an evolutionary explanation in all cases it still has a
lot of explnatory power. I also feel I should point out that the fact that we 'don't have an evolutionary explanation for a given observed phenomenon' doesn't entail that 'we will never have an evolutionary explanation for that given phenomenon'.