The Devil's Advocate...again...(ugh)
Originally posted by Photolysis:
Quote:
Believing something without reason to believe is stupid, and yes it is harmful. For starters, it makes you very vulnerable to exploitation.
:roll:
Just because there is no evidence for something does not make it stupid to believe in. Would it have been stupid for someone to beleive that the world was round before Eratosthenes proved, with math and logic, that it was round? Someone (people like Copernicus) believed in the heliocentric model of the solar system, although there was a load of "evidence" by people such as Ptolemy and his "epicycles" and Anaximander, who proposed that the heavens must be a perfect sphere because if you look up, it seems that we are encased in a sphere of stars. What more evidence did we need, because we could see this with our eyes.
Despite all of this "evidence" (which, by the way was accepted for over 1400 years) people like Copernicus, Tycho Brahe, Johannes Kepler and Galileo contributed to the idea of a heliocentric (sun-centered) solar system!!! If the evidence does not exist yet, does that mean that it is stupid to beleive in???
Before we had the power of extrememly sensitive instruments, we beleived that everything had to rotate around US because if we rotated around the sun, then we would see a shift in the positions of the stars (the ones closer to us would have a more significant movement than the ones farther away), a concept called stellar parallax. This was not measured until 1838!!! That's only 171 years ago... but this proved WITHOUT A DOUBT the heliocentric model...So back to my question; would it have been stupid, ignorant, etc. to beleive in the heliocentric model before 1838? The majority of the scientific community had begun beleiving it YEARS before then.
So back to my questions: Would it have been stupid to beleive in the roundness of the earth before Eratosthenes proved it? He questioned, experimented and proved. If no one questions, no progress is made, and the world's information remains static. Your argument that "Just because the existence of a higher power has not been proved makes it stupid to beleive in" is highly flawed.
As a side note: Simply because there is no physical, numerical or statistical proof does not mean that one is without a reason to believe in something. Some people have intensely religious/faith-building experiences, and as such, they have their reason. This is the proof that they need.
Faith does no always make people "vulnerable to exploitation". There are plenty of people who have intense religious/spiritual beliefs who are not a part of an organized religion, but rather a self-guided religious path...there is no one to exploit these people, unless you argue that they are going to exploit themselves...:wtf:. And simply because someone belongs to an established religion does not mean that they are going to be exploited. There are plenty of religions that do not "exploit" their members. Take Islam for example. It is a very personal religion, and you are not asked to donate anything, except for your devotion to Allah. Many Jews and Christians are also not always "exploited". Really there are only a few religions that actually exploit all of their members...such as Scientology (sorry to any Scientologists out there, but that's my experience) because to rise in the church and to gain "essential" information, one has to pay. But just because someone is religious, does not mean that they're an idiot, and going to fall into every "a penny for your soul" sort of sales pitch. Tell me what's wrong or harmful from people believing in a higher power, and that they go somewhere when they die...It's not going to kill you to let people believe in something.
LIVE AND LET LIVE!
Do I need to go on?