Or what it shows Dart is that non-theists have no particular associated dogmas.
Some don't, some do. But the same holds true for theists like myself.
Respect...don't not entail "blind devotion".
This goes well beyond respect. I respect plenty of people in the media, but I don't feel obligated to get into a drag out war defending them whenever they are criticized. There is clearly a sense of brotherhood with Harris on this forum, and again it is no different from LDS defending LDS leaders. Harris has become a leader and a spokesperson for atheists today, so there is a desire to rush to the aide of one of their own. It is knee-jerk, requiring little or no thinking, as shown already.
I haven't seen any criticisms worth much comment on. You basically write strawmen arguments which aren't worth bothering with.
Well, you keep saying this but you haven't provided any examples, either here or in PM. What's up with that?
I don't respect him for innovation, I respect him because he presents rational arguments against the irrational of religion and does so in my opinion well.
But it has been shown Harris is a sciolist who only pretends to know what he is talking about. His arguments are usually borrowed, but the ones that originate with him are utterly stupid. For instance, his attempt to show that religious people were no more moral than atheists by pointing out how "red"(republcan) states had high crime rates. An astute researcher who really had knowledge and respect for the proper and ethical manner of education, would have pointed out somewhere, at least in a footnote, that even in those states, the blue counties were usually responsible for the most crime within those states. Was Harris aware of this? If he did any kind of personal research, he must have been aware. If so, he intentionally withheld it. If not, well he is still an idiot for presenting it because the argument backfires on him either way.
Why doesn't Sam Harris know that roughly 93% of wars in recorded history have had no correlation whatsoever to religious motive? He simply relays old myth about how dangerous religion is. And he doesn't even know what religion is to begin with.
He has something to offer.
LIKE WHAT??
Where is the innovation? Without that, he has nothing to offer.
I've enjoyed his books and talks I've heard.
Well of course you have silly. I'm sure you get a rush out of it the same way Mormons get a rush from listening to Glen Beck. They got someone who believes what they do, in the media spotlight. More power to him, right?
Perhaps he is one of the better presenters and book writers on this issue of the irrationality of religion. Of what I've seen so far, I think he is.
Well that is a stupid thing to be good at since religion is not inherently irrational, and Sam Harris hasn't even begun to make a case that it is. Most scholars know he is full of bunk. The only people really excited about his books are his choir, which means he really isn't doing much to further atheism or increase its pool.
While Schmo said Harris is one of the greatest thinkers of our time that does not mean every other non-theist says the same thing. Some may think that, some don't.
Point taken, but that was the only issue I was tackling here, before I got gang banged.
No one seems particularly interested in discussing with you. I find I don't even think you are serious in the things you say.
Oh give me a break marg. Who on this forum has had as many diverse, in depth discussions as I have? I've had deep discussions with just about everyone on this forum who is capable of such discussion. People speak up when they think they can refute something I have said. This "I'm not sure you're serious" seems like a silly response. I am serious. Yor comment implies that what I am saying is so obviously stupid. Well, why stop with implication? Just demonstrate it to be so.
The fact that you distort, misrepresent what others say, that you time and again resort to strawmen arguments indicates you aren't being serious as far as the issues go, at least that's my perception.
OK, I've asked you three times now to present an example and you only reiterate the same nonsense, which is hardly "fact." The only fact here is that you like to keep saying the same thing over again, accusing me of stuff without demonstration, and strangely enough, spending a lot of time responding to me whle ironically claiming you don' find anything worth responding to.
This isn't what Harris said. He said " Some propositions are so dangerous that it may even be ethical to kill people for believing them."
Um, yeah, essentially what I said. The verb "to believe" corresponds to "beliefs."
Did you read his book Dart? And if so the context in which that line appears?
Yes, I read most of it, including the context of this statement. Context doesn't help Harris. And while Harris has tried spinning his way out of this Freudian slip, he did say that the way he worded it made it extremely easy for people to misunderstand. But there is no other logical way it could be understood. He said what he said that he thinks it might be ethical to kill people for "believing" certain "propositions."
In that context did he suggest that that people should be killed because of their Muslim beliefs, or their Christian beliefs or whatever other religion you wish to use?
Harris still doesn't flat out deny that this is not what he believes. This s his response to the "misunderstanding."
This paragraph appears after a long discussion of the role that belief plays in governing human behavior, and it should be read in that context. Some critics have interpreted the second sentence of this passage to mean that I advocate simply killing religious people for their beliefs. Granted, I made the job of misinterpreting me easier than it might have been, but such a reading remains a frank distortion of my views. Read in context, it should be clear that I am not at all ignoring the link between belief and behavior. The fact that belief determines behavior is what makes certain beliefs so dangerous.
When one asks why it would be ethical to drop a bomb on Osama bin Laden or Ayman Al Zawahiri, the answer cannot be, “because they have killed so many people in the past.” These men haven’t, to my knowledge, killed anyone personally. However, they are likely to get a lot of innocent people killed because of what they and their followers believe about jihad, martyrdom, the ascendancy of Islam, etc. As I argued in The End of Faith, a willingness to take preventative action against a dangerous enemy is compatible with being against the death penalty (which I am). Whenever we can capture and imprison jihadists, we should. But in most cases this is impossible.
Harris says that he has been misinterpreted but he doesn't explain how his statement could be interpreted any other way. So the relevant context is, according to Harris, "The fact that belief determines behavior is what makes certain beliefs so dangerous."
So? How does this make his statement imply something altogether different? I actually doevtails nicely with it. Belief determines behavior therefore it might be ethical to kill people for "believing" dangerous propositions. That goes together just perfect. There is no qualification in there.
If what Harris says is true in the above "explanation," then his point would have already been made without the comment about ethical killing. There was no reason for him to take it to that level. And again, it is interesting that Harris never does flat out deny that this is his view.
Moreover, it becomes clear in his explanation about that Harris exhibits a tremendous amount of ignorance about the war in Afghanistan. We were at war with a group of militants who attacked us, the same as we would respond to any foreign attacks. The United States made no military policy that said it would target those with specific beliefs. It targeted Al Qeida camps because they were in military training, not because they were in religious training. Harris just reinvents the war to suit his agenda. I mean this idiot really believes we declared war on Islam.
When referring to Muslim violence against America, he asserted on O'Reilly that religious belief, "it and nothing else explains the kind of violence we seem Muslims practicing." Can he really be this stupid? Osama bin Ladin and his supporters make it perfectly clear why they hate and attack America, and it has more to do with the fact that they do not want America's presence in the Middle East. They consider it an act of war and they are willing to fight by whatever means they can, even if that means suicide bombing. But is suicide bombing unique to Muslims? Harris is ignorant because he said only religious belief could account for these attacks, and yet he ignores the fact that this has been practiced by the Tamil Tigers in Sir Lanka, who do so not for religious cause.
Robert Pape is the world's leading expert on the subject, a sociologist who has studied this extensively. He concluded:
"Beneath the religious rhetoric with which [such terror] is perpetrated, it occurs largely in the service of secular aims. Suicide terrorism is mainly a response to foreign occupation rather than a product of Islamic fundamentalism. ... Though it speaks of Americans as infidels, al-Qaida is less concerned with converting us to Islam than removing us from Arab and Muslim lands." (http://www.theage.com.au/news/opinion/w ... 45036.html)
But according to Harris, religion is the only explanation! And he basis this on ... what? He has no scientifc studies to determine causation. He only has his hatred of religion and a blind bigotry.
Harris is not interested in being educated. He is not interested in facts. He is not interested in listening to what these bombers actually say and what reasons they give for their actions. Instead, he is only interested in exploiting the war for his atheist agenda.