EAllusion wrote:I don't think anyone should believe in Mormonism. That would end Mormonism, I would imagine. I feel the same way about any other view I regard as extremely unreasonable. If you don't think that people should not believe unreasonable things, then I think there is a problem with you. To rhetorically compare that to Nazi genocide is so over the top ridiculous that it's more sad than offensive.
There's far more to life than "science and fact". People do believe many "unreasonable" things, that is true, and they are not
only among the "religious". There's a, if you unlike, a "spiritual dimension" to every person on earth, something that cold hard facts can never understand/comfort. When we are depressed, lonely, feel lost, inadequate, and need human affection, and most of all forgiveness for past mistakes, "science" is a "miserable comforter". When one experiences the loss, through death, of a loved one, or even a traumatic divorce, and worst of all, the loss of a child, Nietzsche or Newtonian physics are unlikely to provide relief or comfort.
You may well call this "grabbing at crutches". Humans are more than "evolution's machines". They feel, they hurt, and they cry. Let me know when someone gets a computer to feel real emotion, and to cry.
Paradoxical faith in a post- optimistic world.