 Originally Posted by Photolysis
Since when was I not doing that? I don't force children to listen to me. I don't preach on street corners, or knock on peoples' houses asking if they've been saved. In "real life" I only give my opinion if someone wants to hear it. Posting my opinions on a small corner of the Internet in a topic discussing such issues (i.e. which invites such opinions) which no one is forced to read in any way is not doing anything.
This is a standard defence when anyone's beliefs are criticised. It is a rather tedious one, I have to say. You've criticised me. How about you LIVE AND LET LIVE, and stop being a hypocrite?.
Since you called people stupid for having belief/faith. I have only criticised your intolerance... But you're entitled to be intolerant and ignorant if you want. No skin off my nose. I don't care that you're posting your opinions on the web (look what I'm doing)...I appreciate your opinion, but that does not mean that I have to agree with it. I don't go preach or knock...I'm just doing what you are: "Posting my opinions on a small corner of the Internet in a topic discussing such issues (i.e. which invites such opinions) which no one is forced to read in any way is not doing anything."
Good for them! That still doesn't make it a good reason, just because it satisfies that person.
What's wrong with someone being satisfied? Plenty of people in this world would tell you that their set of spiritual beliefs are based on personal evidence (so you can't call me on an error of syntax again ) and that just because you don't think it's a good reason, does not mean that it isn't good enough for someone else out there. Who gets to say what a "good reason" is?
One of the 5 Pillars of Islam stipulates the giving of 2.5% of a person's wealth for charitable deeds. Research?
Umm...yeah I do my research, but how is that evidence that the religion of Islam is exploiting its members? (Remember that's what we were talking about...stay on topic!) If they are encouraged to give a percentage of their income to charity, it does not go to benefit the religion as a whole, just the soul of the giver. To exploit means to "take selfish or unfair advantage of a person or situation, usually for personal gain". Tell me how Islam does this... this wealth goes to "charitable deeds" such as private charities or organizations such as the Red Cross. That does not seem to be for the "personal gain" of Islam.
The irony is that it does kill people, even if it's not myself. Faith healing, for starters? What about all the bizarre beliefs of cults? Exorcism? What about those who are religiously motivated to commit acts of terrorism; that could well kill me?
Really now, what percentage of the world's religions/cults commit acts of terrorism? What do you think YOUR chances are of being killed? What are the chances that ANY individual in the world will be killed by an act of religious violence. Yes, there are people in Iraq, for example, who have a much greater chance of dying as a result of religious violence, but that does not mean that the religion itself is supporting the actions. Do you know who the main victims are of Islamist-militant violence?--Muslims. Tell me that you think that a religion is supporting this...and show me evidence. Unless we all hop a freighter for the Middle East, or somehow get transported through time to the Crusades, I think that our chances of dying as a result of a religious beleif is pretty low. And my original comment was "It' s not going to kill you to let people believe in something." So, since you have a chance of being killed by a beleif, does that mean that you are going to limit what an individual can beleive? Yeah, that's tolerant.
Originally posted by Xei:
I disagree that there was ever any evidence for the theories that Copernicus etc. overthrew. This should be clear because they were incorrect. For example, there was never any evidence that the planets and Sun moved around the Earth in complex looping patterns, as opposed to the hypothesis that the planets moved around the Sun in ellipses, because both would have had the same observational consequences with regards to astronomy from Earth at least. Part of the scientific method is ensuring that you have eliminated all other possibilities which could explain your observations.
Sorry, but there was observational and mathematical evidence for the theories that Copernicus and his "descendants" overthrew. For hundreds, even thousands of years, people had been studying the heavens, and their observations pop up all over the place...mythologies, scholarly writings, and in philosophy (do some research on the Aristotileans and the Atomists).= Hundreds of years of observational data...misinterpreted, but still there, nonetheless. However, Ptolemy had mathematically solved the problem of epicycles...which is one reason that it took 1400 years to refute! (Also there was the Roman Catholic Church and the Inquiry... )
But I have to disagree strongly with you when you say that "Part of the scientific method is ensuring that you have eliminated all other possibilities which could explain your observations." Um...if we had to eliminate ALL other possibilities, then nothing (or few things at best) would ever be explained in our observations. Ever heard of Occam's Razor? It states that: "when two or more explanations for an event exist, the simpler one is generally true, as it has fewer assumptions." This still means that it could be explained in another way...like the helliocentric model and epicycles.
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