Paul Osborne wrote:In other words, you'll trust them where it's convenient to trust them but not where it conflicts with your cherished beliefs?
Yes, that's right. I'm not giving up my precious religious beliefs just because there is a collection of scientific data that says this and that.
Well, I have to give you credit for admitting it. Good on ya.
Paul Osborne wrote:I'd rather believe in storks, damnit. I'm keeping my fricking religious beliefs. That's not to say I don't respect your beliefs, because I think everyone has the right to decide things for themselves. We can still be friends and disagree strongly about key things.
That's true. I recently had a conversation with my ex-mormon yet still god-fearing brother, and I made an offhand comment involving natural selection. He jumped on it asking me some creationist slanted question thinking he would trip me up, and it suddenly occurred to me that after all these years, he still thinks evolution is a hoax. I was amazed. The conversation got mildly heated before we decided it would be best to just not talk about it, and move on to other things.
Toward the end of the phone call, he told me he was sorry for jumping on me over evolution, and I told him it didn't matter; he's still my brother and I still love him no matter what.
As I've said many times before, it's easy for me to criticize the belief and still respect the person. Beliefs don't make a person; they only describe something about their perspective.