Tal Bachman wrote:However, the story you did include is from someone who was "floored" by "The God Delusion" after doubting Christianity for years and years. That is, the person was not a "devout religious believer" at all.
SO WHAT. Do you count among all of those masses of people ("More than Dawkins! His wee-wee is smaller!") that you have brought out of the Mormon church only the ones
who were the most devout? If a person somehow has doubts, I'm sorry, they don't count? Their conversion isn't "good enough?" Did you appeal to their reason, their logic, and if so, does their eventual conversion under these conditions not "count?"
In fact, even the most devout people have doubts. Recent revelations regarding the personal faith even of Mother Theresa have shown us that. So your assertion that the most "devout religious believers" will not be fazed by Dawkins is patently absurd, since total devotion and faith do not exist. We ALL have doubts, all the time, along the continuum of our beliefs. If people are caught at a low point along that continuum, I think that still counts.
I'll bet you count the doubting fence-sitters you've converted, too. You just won't let Dawkins do the same.
I continue to think it highly doubtful that devout religious believers will be much affected by "The God Delusion", and the reason why, is also why I referred to Dawkins as a witch doctor.
Dawkins' overstepping in his estimation of the power of his own line of argumentation does not invalidate that argument.
Dawkins makes a hubris-filled statement. We all do. The fact is that he has opened up a conversation about the nature and validity of belief, as many others have done, and it is ONE way of many in order to do so. Perhaps hard cases who grasp their belief as a way to bolster their emotional needs should be left entirely alone. This book, then, is not for them, just as
your presentation of logical arguments here on this forum is not for everyone.
Consider, friends: Richard Dawkins himself repeatedly characterizes religious believers as in thrall to deepest irrationality. So what does he present to them to help "save" them from deepest irrationality? Purely rational arguments.
Hello?
You engage with Mormons and appeal to their reason as well. That is evident from your participation on this board. Yet when Dawkins appeals to reason, he's wrong, because he framed his declaration with an all-inclusive, over-reaching, arrogant statement? Aside from forced brainwashing, appeals to logic are in fact the only way to get someone to step outside of their mindset and regard their beliefs from an outside vantagepoint.
It requires not coldly rational thinking, but MAGICAL thinking to believe that human beings deeply in thrall to, now emotionally and psychologically dependent on, irrationality, are going to be cured by mere exposure to Dawkins's tidy little tidbits of rationality (remember Dawkins's quote about believers being atheists when they put the book down). That is as naïve a thought as any, and just another indication that Dawkins isn't skeptical enough.
How else is it to be done? In fact, that is
exactly how exit counseling WORKS. They use "an information-oriented approach, which stresses the sharing of information."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exit_counseling Dawkins cannot kidnap and forcibly deprogram believers, a la Rick Ross. He appeals to their logic through the use of information, just like Carol Giambalvo, Janja Lalich, or David Clark.
Maybe the desire for a new non-religious alpha has blinded them to what they already know full well. Maybe it's too terrible to contemplate that for all his other talents, in important respects Richard Dawkins is full of sh*t on a few issues (I.e., too terrible to contemplate that he's like everyone else).
I hope that you give at least some people credit for being a little more complex than that. Human beings are a cocktail. I don't think you can boil them down to binary, "Alpha Male" seeking, mindless, magnetized groupies. If a person is an alpha male, I am LESS likely to give them credence. Substance is actually of some importance to me, and I'm sure I'm not alone. Alpha-male-seeking groupies might be your experience of people, and if so, I'm sorry. You're missing many of the nuances that actually make relationships worth having.
So no, I'm not following Dawkins around, panting on his every word, because I perceive him as some kind of alpha male. I admire the fact that he has opened up a conversation. End of story.
Richard Dawkins isn't skeptical enough. In a number of areas, he is very naïve. Reason, facts, logic from ostensibly antagonistic sources - these very rarely, if ever, break the true believer free of his trance. Judge for yourselves by the discussions on this very board with Mormons.
Then a different approach is needed for these types of people, or they ought to be left alone entirely. Dawkins is not for them.
(You getting hot yet Moniker? :P)
Speaking of over-reaching arrogance....
What the “F” does that have to do with anything? Maybe you need to register for the Playboy chat forum.