EAllusion wrote:I take this attitude as akin to your putting Ann Coulter on the same plane of ignorance and annoyance as Rachel Maddow.
I don’t know about that, but the above was a mistake on my part.
EAllusion wrote:Village atheists types have problems, but your striking an above it all pose while equating them with conservative religious counterparts glosses over some significant differences in the degree of their failings.
I do think their failings are largely comparable, if not equal.
Tarski wrote:Are you sure that this wasn't originally the result of some theists trying to make Russell look bad by pinning this possibly phoney quote on him?
That is a possibility, but I’m more disturbed how quickly the quote was embraced as something legitimate from Bertrand Russell
Chap wrote:The statement ascribed to Russell in the OP precisely describes my own attitude, so far as the simple affirmation or denial of propositions are concerned.
With a gun to my head, I would be quite happy to stay alive at the cost of stating:
"Yes! There is a greatest prime number" or "No! Men are definitely not endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights!" and so on.
If on the other hand the demand was "Tell us where your wife and children are hiding", I hope the answer would be 'Shan't."
But propositions just aren’t restricted to abstract and removed topics, refusing to reveal the location of your wife and children can be seen as you refusing to deny the truth of the proposition “ My wife and kids are worth dying for”
Going by the fake quote, you would reject that proposition because you might just be wrong about the truth vale of your wife and children are worth dying for.
Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:You lost me here. I take it that Bertrand wasn't willing to do that with the Kaiser, but was prepared to do that with Hitler. Am I missing something?
Just before WWI broke out, Russell had calculated that surrendering to the Kaiser would be less damaging to England and Europe than fighting in a world war, even if surrender was distasteful. The second time around, the morals and ideology of the Nazis were so disgusting to him, that he decided that England must fight beause the cost of submitting to the Nazis was unthinkable.
Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:This is an interesting idea, but could you list the uncritical methods as they relate to "village atheism" and "TBMism" to further the discussion along?
In this specific case, it is the uncritical acceptance of something that was presented by a fellow atheist, without much reflection. While I think the idea expressed in the quote is terrible, it doesn’t bother me much that people were agreeing with