Brian63
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2001
- Messages
- 1,639
- Location
- Michigan
- Gender
- Male
- Basic Beliefs
- Freethinker/atheist/humanist
Over time, it has seemed more essential to me that we atheists, secularists, agnostics, etc. prioritize the reduction of religion over all other human traits. Religion holds back human progress on so many other issues, that our elimination of it we should see it as the focus of our efforts. Religion gives people invalid and ethically objectionable views on legal issues like gay rights, scientific issues like creationism/evolution, various social and psychological issues like how families function with each other (as one example, people may remain in “secular closets” for much of their lives because of fear of coming out of them), environmental issues like whether climate change is a real phenomenon, a person’s religion will be a dominant factor in choosing who to vote for in political elections which in turn affect us all, it may inspire some people to commit acts of terrorism against people who are not members of their particular religion, it affects people’s choices in determining their own personal medical care and end-of-life decisions, and much more.
A person’s religious beliefs are not just 1 view among a wide bundle of beliefs that they happened to hold. Rather, a person’s religious beliefs will greatly influence, practically determine, what their views will be on so many other issues as well. That affects them, as well as others near them, and all of us to some extent.
Not only does it affect what their other views will be on various matters, but it also influences (in a negative way) their underlying thought processes and how they use (or misuse) logic to form their worldviews. It relies on the ridiculous thought that it is a virtue to have belief without evidence (aka “faith”) to justify religious beliefs in particular. We human beings should instead treat it as a virtue to be open-minded and be willing to doubt our beliefs, think about our beliefs in more depth, and be willing to change our beliefs when the available evidence compels us to. Being open-minded should be considered a virtue, and not being closed-minded.
So I believe that it is important to devote some effort to change people’s views on specific issues like those listed above like gay rights, evolution/creationism, medical and health choices, and more, but still our primary efforts should be directed towards eliminating the harmful influence of religion. It is a roadblock in the way to so much progress, on so many issues, in so many ways.
To help achieve that, the most helpful thing a person can do is be an out-of-the-closet and outspoken atheist. Make it publicly known that atheists are real, we do not fit the negative stereotypes that religions declare about us, we have real disagreements with and objections to their religion (and are not just “searching for God” or trying to suppress hurtful feelings or other superficial declarations of our motives), and we are going to stand up for ourselves. It is okay to be an atheist, okay to doubt religions, okay to live a different lifestyle than the ones that religions impose on their followers.
Religion is the first thing that needs to be removed, before any real progress can be made.
Thoughts? Considerations?
Thanks,
Brian
A person’s religious beliefs are not just 1 view among a wide bundle of beliefs that they happened to hold. Rather, a person’s religious beliefs will greatly influence, practically determine, what their views will be on so many other issues as well. That affects them, as well as others near them, and all of us to some extent.
Not only does it affect what their other views will be on various matters, but it also influences (in a negative way) their underlying thought processes and how they use (or misuse) logic to form their worldviews. It relies on the ridiculous thought that it is a virtue to have belief without evidence (aka “faith”) to justify religious beliefs in particular. We human beings should instead treat it as a virtue to be open-minded and be willing to doubt our beliefs, think about our beliefs in more depth, and be willing to change our beliefs when the available evidence compels us to. Being open-minded should be considered a virtue, and not being closed-minded.
So I believe that it is important to devote some effort to change people’s views on specific issues like those listed above like gay rights, evolution/creationism, medical and health choices, and more, but still our primary efforts should be directed towards eliminating the harmful influence of religion. It is a roadblock in the way to so much progress, on so many issues, in so many ways.
To help achieve that, the most helpful thing a person can do is be an out-of-the-closet and outspoken atheist. Make it publicly known that atheists are real, we do not fit the negative stereotypes that religions declare about us, we have real disagreements with and objections to their religion (and are not just “searching for God” or trying to suppress hurtful feelings or other superficial declarations of our motives), and we are going to stand up for ourselves. It is okay to be an atheist, okay to doubt religions, okay to live a different lifestyle than the ones that religions impose on their followers.
Religion is the first thing that needs to be removed, before any real progress can be made.
Thoughts? Considerations?
Thanks,
Brian