A quick response (or two) to vegetariantaxidermy:
The nuts, yes. The theologians (e.g. those who are informed), not so much (in my experience). This is the point I'm after. I would happily join in with atheists in taking on the nuts, but it's when the nuts are taken to be a "correct" understanding of orthodoxy (or any tradition) that I tend to get frustrated.vegetariantaxidermy wrote:Actually atheists tend to know a lot more about religion than religious nuts do.
Well, someone has to do this, no? If no one studies fairies in depth, then how do we know we ought not believe in them? Obviously, that's sort of a comical position, but I think the idea holds. If you've not been given good reasons not believe in them, why shouldn't you? But on a more serious note, belief in God is not on the same level as belief in fairies, if for no other reason than that the existence of one can be more or less settled by the hard sciences, while the other can't.vegetariantaxidermy wrote:I don't see why I should have to study fairies in depth to know that I don't believe in them.