AnEmpiricalAgnostic
Agnostic by Fact, Atheist by Epiphany
- May 25, 2005
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Although I will not argue that there are not many groups (be them governmental, religious, or other) that compete for mind share these days, I will have to make a distinction about what is age appropriate. To present a theistic philosophy to a mere child is brain-washing IMHO. The child is developmentally ill-equipped to receive this information objectively. Yet religion impresses their doctrines on them as fact without hesitation.madbear said:Fair enough. Irreligion also has an impact on impressionable minds. So does Disneyland. It's hard to be a parent. It's natural, I think, for parents to want their children to follow the religious practices that they themselves have -- I think it's expecting a great deal from parents not to encourage this. It's also natural, I think, for a Christian to want to spread the message. Irritating, but natural After all, the NT starts with ``This is the beginning of the good news''. It's expecting a great deal of people to keep good news to themselves.
One of my children is now six. I would not have brought up the topic of god with him if it wasnt for the fact that there were those outside of the family that already started impressing religious dogma on him as fact. When he asked me about god I tried to make him understand, on a six year old level, that it is not something that can be known for sure. I told him that this other person believes that god exists but that because there was no evidence that I did not think so. I tried to then draw parallels to ghosts and other supernatural things he may have heard of and illustrate that there is no evidence but some people believe.
This is way too early, imho, to be getting into to this kind of stuff but someone else forced my hand. As my children develop I plan to educate them on empiricism (where it works and where it doesnt), philosophy, epistemology, etc. and let them decide for themselves. I think as parents we should equip our children to think and give them the tools to come to their own conclusions. Religion is too aggressive (at least here in the states) for my comfort. I really take exception with someone impressing their beliefs as fact on my child. The scary fact is that with the right molding one can turn a child into a suicide-bomber. The potential for abuse is there and I think religion is taking it too far.
In the arena of religion the abuse involves the minds of people. To me this makes the implications far more serious.madbear said:The problem is that, if you've got parents passing the message on to their children, and other Christians on to everybody else, before long you've got a church. Given sufficient time and zeal, you've got an Institution. When you've got an Institution, I guess that's when the potential for serious abuses of authority arise.
madbear said:There's no doubt that religious arguments have been used to justify some thoroughly discreditable actions over the course of history. FWIW, institutional atheism does not have an unblemished record in this respect either; but two wrongs don't make a right.
Ive always tried to get across to people that I am not anti-theistic. I just want people to think for themselves. I think religion is used, more often than not, as a tool for the gain of power and profit. The problem is that this happens at the expense of many peoples mind. Most of the religious people I talk to dont have the slightest clue why they believe. This is horrifying to me.madbear said:
If you're considering religious belief as a social force, I guess the only important question is: on balance, does good or bad come from this? Where Christianity is concerned, it can be argued either way, I think. For my part, I think that the arguments that Christianity is a force for social good are somewhat more cogent and compelling than arguments that it is a force for ill. But it's not overwhelming, and I appreciate that, as far as winning hearts and minds is concerned, ``On balance, Christianity probably doesn't f**k up the world'' isn't really a winner.
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