Mercury wrote:I can't wait till that day when we can put a bullet in the head of every corn pone faith-based bigot out there when they try to take america "for god". You are one of those individuals.
If this comment is a joke, then it's a bad joke.
If it's not a joke, then this is exactly the kind of attitude that I want absolutely no part of, and no association with.
Ironically, I'm quite sure that Dawkins would not want to be associated with it either.
When it comes to the 'science' of Atheism, I think Dawkins is spot on. He articulates the arguments very well and he knows his stuff.
But when it comes to his critique of religion and his understanding of religion on a practical level - I
do find Dawkins a tad naïve. I already went over some of my reasons for that appraisal in the 'other thread'.
I get the impression that Dawkins got pissed off by Creationists in relation to attacks on Evolution - and that this 'conflict' led him eventually to see all religion as a 'problem'. I don't think he 'objectively' viewed religion dispassionately over a period of time and started off on his 'campaign' against religion on 'his own steam'. He was more
'pushed' into it - mainly by the creationists / ID-ers that were vexing him in his scientific sphere.
That is the distinct impression I have - after seeing several interviews with him.
I think Dawkins 'naïveté' on religion is demonstrated in the discussion linked to:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid ... 6&hl=en-GB...between Dawkins and McGrath.
I actually give most of the discussion to Dawkins. Because most of the discussion deals with the best way to analyse empirical reality. Dawkins is on solid ground here - and takes McGrath to task.
I found the middle section a little 'irrelevant'. Dawkins didn't like the macabre nature of the crucifixion. Well, that's away from Dawkins own point - it doesn't matter what the judgement of the truth is, it matters if it is true or not. That was his own point, and yet he seems to move away from it in the middle...
But I think at 54 mins, McGrath becomes the one mainly speaking sense, and I see a bit of Dawkins naïveté coming to the fore. He wants to completely remove Stalins atheism and anti-religious views from what he did - as if they had no bearing whatsoever. That is
naïve - and I have no problem saying it. There is no doubt in my mind that McGrath is far more correct in his judgments and his observations in this last section of the interview.
Dawkins states that the kind of rational conversation McGrath and himself were having was "antithetical' to faith. And yet McGrath is there having the conversation - and he is
faithful - therefore by the very act of turning up he is making it clear that Dawkins can only be talking about a certain 'type' of faith...
dartagnan wrote:Oh wow, a convenient echo chamber. Yea, we're sure to learn plenty.
I watched the discussion expecting to learn more about the opinions of a few people.
Nothing more.
This violence and repression was undertaken in pursuit of an atheist agenda - the elimination of religion.
The 'elimination of religion' is
not an 'atheist agenda'. It is on the agenda of 'some atheists'. Quite a different statement.
I'd like to get some input from the rational thinking atheists here.
Ahh - so you don't want 'idiots' replying then. Got ya.