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Just As Dogmatic
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are atheists/agnostics just as dogmatic about their unbelief as religionists are of theirs?
Wouldnt it be more honest to say (when it comes to the 'big issues' such as life after death, paranormal experiences, etc) that we just dont know?
Ive wavered between belief systems for years and have read the bible/koran/other religious writings and Dawkins/Hitchens et all.
Ive spent countless hours reading forums of all faiths and those of no faith. But what strikes me is how similar, atheists present their case similar to how religionists present theirs..."im right and youre wrong"....no middle ground.
Wouldnt it be more honest to say (when it comes to the 'big issues' such as life after death, paranormal experiences, etc) that we just dont know?
Ive wavered between belief systems for years and have read the bible/koran/other religious writings and Dawkins/Hitchens et all.
Ive spent countless hours reading forums of all faiths and those of no faith. But what strikes me is how similar, atheists present their case similar to how religionists present theirs..."im right and youre wrong"....no middle ground.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.That we suffer from a lack of knowledge of how best to live our lives in the world we face in this 21st century should be an obvious observation, as should the fact that no single text written centuries ago holds all the answers to our dilemma.
In the search for those answers, mysticisms which have only succeeded in plunging humanity into the dark ages have proven to be the last place we should turn to for those answers. Relying on religion to fill the void in our understanding does nothing to alleviate our ignorance while providing only a detour in our pursuit of the knowledge we lack and so desperately need.
There is no omniscient one withholding from us answers to questions we dare not ask for fear of retribution. It is only by virtue of reason we have learned to stand on our own two feet and are enabled to reap the fruits of our labours, to learn from our past experience and look forward to a future mystics only dream of achieving . . . beyond the grave.
In the search for those answers, mysticisms which have only succeeded in plunging humanity into the dark ages have proven to be the last place we should turn to for those answers. Relying on religion to fill the void in our understanding does nothing to alleviate our ignorance while providing only a detour in our pursuit of the knowledge we lack and so desperately need.
There is no omniscient one withholding from us answers to questions we dare not ask for fear of retribution. It is only by virtue of reason we have learned to stand on our own two feet and are enabled to reap the fruits of our labours, to learn from our past experience and look forward to a future mystics only dream of achieving . . . beyond the grave.
Saw the Liddle documentary the first time you posted the link, Khandro. Think I commented on it at the time, misspelling his name by confusion with Alice's dad and co-editor of the famous lexicon. Am surprised that you seek such a virulent Islamophobe as an ally. I've been a Spectator subscriber for five years. It reunited me with some former "friends" like Matthew Parris (whom I used to admire as a lucid and courageous journalist, but have since fallen out with over his recent Spectator article in defence of "The New Barbarism", i.e. Muslim "sensibilities"). It introduced me to two new ones, however: Rod Liddle and Douglas Murray. Whatever Liddle hs got wrong about atheism he has got right about other things.
http:// www.spe ctator. co.uk/c olumnis ts/rod- liddle/ 9286532 /its-ok -to-men tion-an ti-semi tic-att acks-bu t-not-w ho-comm its-the m/
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