Yes.
i'm not sure whether you are simply being stubborn (and perhaps dogmatic) here, but did you miss the irony in your own statement?
Yes.
i'm not sure whether you are simply being stubborn (and perhaps dogmatic) here, but did you miss the irony in your own statement?
What irony? The fact that the removal of an ideology that divides mankind be ironic in bringing people together?
You prefer the current state of affairs where those ideologies never allow people to be brought together?
Educate me in your elustrioius wisdom.
What irony? The fact that the removal of an ideology that divides mankind be ironic in bringing people together?
Originally Posted by (Q)
We'd have to bury Islam first as it is an ideology that condones and propagates the "us vs them" mentality.
You prefer the current state of affairs where those ideologies never allow people to be brought together?
Educate me in your elustrioius wisdom.
Huh?lightgigantic:
I'm talking about what the religious text teaches. Not what the people do. Because inevitably the teachings will influence the fundamental followers.
Once again, if the christians and muslims in your street aren't firebombing your mailbox, it tends to indicate a different message is being preached at the pulpit.Are you trying to tell me that the old testament and the qur'an don't preach violence?
An Atheist world is not a better world because so many Atheists are very dangerous .
An emotional cake and eat it too, I would say. Let's assume that he does not realize that 'Islam' refers not only to the religion but also to Muslims and their civilization as a whole. Given this charitable assumption on our part we can grant him missing the full implications of how his sentiment - generous and peaceful as it was - would be taken, especially considering how the West is currently interacting with the Muslim world. But his choice of the verb 'bury' makes it hard not to take back that granting.i'm not sure whether you are simply being stubborn (and perhaps dogmatic) here, but did you miss the irony in your own statement?
Japan is a dying nation. Children have suicide pacts on the internet and their population is mostly old. Atheism = dead society
Japan isn't even an atheist nation.
Not to mention being atheist is no guarantee of anything. Soviet Russia wasn't that great a place to live in.
It was for atheists. They could live in an anti-religion atmosphere and do what they did best. Drink themselves into oblivion. No religion, no AA.
See?
Japan isn't even an atheist nation.
Not to mention being atheist is no guarantee of anything. Soviet Russia wasn't that great a place to live in.
IMO, the 20th century tends to indicate that indeed yes this is the case.once again, brothers grim renditions of history aside, the 20th century tends to indicate otherwise.
I'm not sure that all these atheists you group together are willing to demand that their ideology bears an exclusive political representation (generally they tend to be embarrassed by the proselytizing of the new atheists)IMO, the 20th century tends to indicate that indeed yes this is the case.
Take Japan for example. Or modern day Europe. And even America these last decades. These countries have traditionally been theistic. Most 65+ are still theistic. But now, after about two generations of stability, the <40s are naturally becoming atheistic. It's still a small percentage, but much larger than has been the case throughout most of history. Maybe we should say it's stability, education, literacy and advance science. This combination tend to favor atheism.
Surely you'd agree with these demographics?
You're right. Soviet Russia was absolutely thriving.You guys are missing my point.
It doesn't matter if only one of the nations in the article are in fact athiest, it still proves that it is possible for an athiest nation to thrive.
That disproves the argument of many theists, that without belief in god, society will crumble.
That's an interesting observation, but I'm not so sure...........I mean, there were atheists during classical Greece and Rome and then there was the religious fervor of Christianity; I think the world just goes through phases.IMO, the 20th century tends to indicate that indeed yes this is the case.
Take Japan for example. Or modern day Europe. And even America these last decades. These countries have traditionally been theistic. Most 65+ are still theistic. But now, after about two generations of stability, the <40s are naturally becoming atheistic. It's still a small percentage, but much larger than has been the case throughout most of history. Maybe we should say it's stability, education, literacy and advance science. This combination tend to favor atheism.
Surely you'd agree with these demographics?
First, what are 'human rights'?Human rights would replace the morals of religion.
OK, but what initiates one of these phases? There were a few atheists in Classical Greece - but why? It was a time of stability and of reason - no?You're right. Soviet Russia was absolutely thriving.
That's an interesting observation, but I'm not so sure...........I mean, there were atheists during classical Greece and Rome and then there was the religious fervor of Christianity; I think the world just goes through phases.
I'm also not so sure that if the world becomes atheist, it'd be a good thing. You guessed it: morals.
Not that religion has to provide morals, but religion is useful because it provides common morals to the masses; i.e, it establishes a uniform standard. And that, in my opinion, is absolutely necessary to a healthy society (a uniform standard of morals).
If religion dies, then some cultural institution will need to take its place in order to provide the backbone of the moral beliefs of the people.
hahaha....I'm not sure that all these atheists you group together are willing to demand that their ideology bears an exclusive political representation (generally they tend to be embarrassed by the proselytizing of the new atheists)
Peace and security don't correlate to material existence ... what to speak of the current take of it.hahaha....
Demographics correlate well with peace and security leading to people becoming atheistic. :shrug:
You'll find that even less of them think that the solutions to the world's problems lies in falling in line with the neo-atheist attitudeKids are pretty cluey now-a-days, talk to them and you'll find that many don't believe in The Gods anymore.