Maths is made up. — Banno
I think the majority of students forget, or perhaps simply ignore, their university education after graduation — Ciceronianus
but I doubt they consider themselves an elite or superior merely by virtue of the fact that they have a college education. — Ciceronianus
On the contrary — baker
As if we haven't seen that mentality utterly fail over and over again throughout history. — kudos
Academic thought seems rarely to be comfortable with presenting it's own views to a non-academic audience, and thus influencing their behaviour. This differs from the old approach of knowledge and truth being a way to attain a greater public good as it takes form in works such as Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics. — kudos
Some people are self-sabotaging, suicidal, and are terrible stewards of their lives and all that is important to them. They don't always do this thinking they're doing right, — Hanover
1. people always act in their own interest. — stoicHoneyBadger
What's funny is the very fact that this is an obvious truth makes people think it is still okay to enact on others :rofl:. Just more political agenda — schopenhauer1
Oh, you want to opt out? You see te irony right? — schopenhauer1
Don't put more workers (people who have to work) into the world in the first place. — schopenhauer1
But to put more people into the situation of [having to work] would be wrong until that problem is solved. — schopenhauer1
From what I have read here so far I am assuming the statements that aren't well defined are maybe the problem more than whether or not it is strictly true or false? — TiredThinker
What if all statements are made by and evaluated by the same person so different vantage points don't become an issue? — TiredThinker
To be good/bad we must exercise our free will but then it has a list of things (e.g. the decalogue) we're prohibited from doing i.e. our free will is rendered pointless. — TheMadFool
Yeah. Mostly people are proud idiot robots. — Banno
We need to be comfortable in the realization that some expressions of piety cause harm. Not all, I grant you. But some do and they are practiced with sincerity and not as a 'cover', which is what the word 'excuse' implies. — Tom Storm
It's not that they need an excuse; they are actually doing 'gods' work.' — Tom Storm
But there has to be something in a person that makes them follow those directions. Because not everyone follows those directions, only some do. — baker
People may be so awfully brainwashed by religious dogma and, coupled with inadequate education and being socialized in certain religious cultures, may actually think that harming people and judging them is what god wants. They are sincere, not using religion as an excuse. — Tom Storm
To be fair, I feel both theism and atheism are, despite their antithetical relationship, partners insofar as ethics is the issue - they seem to work synergistically. Concordia discordis. — TheMadFool
History is replete with instances of religiously-motivated atrocities. We could, with great effort of course, forgive such heinous acts (genocide and more) but then to also have to accept that it was divinely ordained is a tad too much, no? — TheMadFool
With or without religion, good people can behave well and bad people can do evil; but for good people to do evil - that takes religion. — Steven Weingberg
That's just monetary logic - you're merely buying your way into heaven with good deeds as the currency of choice. — TheMadFool
If there is no God, everything is permitted.
— Dostoevsky
The quote above, taken as true, implies that without the facticity of God's existence, morality has no leg to stand on. In other words, religions - humanity's preliminary expeditions in the moral universe - have to be "factually correct" from beginning to end. — TheMadFool
Christianity comes up here most often because that's the dominant and priviledged religion of the West and the one that's crashed into us (often to our cost) the most. — Tom Storm
But the difference with religion is it makes unverifiable claims about bettering the world. It persistently makes claims that belief in god is somehow a positive, transformative power and the evidence for this never stacks up. — Tom Storm
Religions should stop playing the morality card and recognize that they have nothing to offer that any social club can't offer too. Although not all that many social clubs seem to institutionalize child abuse and misogyny to the same high levels... but you get my point. — Tom Storm
I don't see the relevance of the situation of the jews here; except to promulgate the glorification of oppression. And yet another ad hom, this one seemingly saying that my claim is too successful. — Banno
...to wich we can now add the misrepresentation of my view here: — Banno
Every religion(from the very first one) used and achieved political power. They are combined. And humans always used religions for other "purposes". Taking advantage of them.
It wasn't Christianity's privilege at all. It just seems that you find Christianity especially "guilty" for every humanity harm. It has to do with religions in general and not at all with Christianity itself. — dimosthenis9
Even the obvious fact with Egyptians oppressing Jews, you almost demonstrated that it was Jews fault! So what else to say? — dimosthenis9
Blames for all human nature weaknesses religions. As if behind them aren't people.
And after Christianity especially. That Logical row simply makes no sense at all. Add to all these, the historical error that Christianity was first to oppress others, be intolerant and seek political state and you will understand that there isn't much to argue about here. — dimosthenis9
Notice how they do not make reference to historical documents? — Banno