Science Fan wrote: ↑Mon Jun 19, 2017 4:15 pm
Imagine if atheists responded in kind and wrote some "humanistic manifesto" similar to the Bible.
They did. Last time I looked, they were up to three (3) of them.
If atheists wrote such a manifesto and in that manifesto stated that no atheist should ever marry a theist, because a theist was morally evil, I'm sure the religious communities would be in an uproar and would condemn atheists for being bigots.
You're incorrect. We would agree entirely with that. It's good, solid common sense.
Someone who has dedicated his or her life to one thing makes a horrible marriage partner for someone who has dedicated him or herself to the opposite. They destroy each other's happiness and ambitions, because every "win" for one is a "loss" for the other. Marriages don't survive on that basis; or else they survive only by the entire suppression of one partner.
And I think you wouldn't want that. I wouldn't either.
... it still remains socially acceptable in the USA to insult, mock and demonize atheists.
I can't speak to that. I know nothing about such a situation.
What I know is that the press thinks it's open season on Christians, and it's getting worse for Jews.
... in condemning atheists, one is condemning the right of people to express their conscience.
Actually, I agree with that wholeheartedly. A person should have a right to be whatever his or her conscience instructs him or her to be. I'd stand on that principle completely.
However, that doesn't mean that people are above being questioned on what they believe, and can't be asked for reasons to support what they say. Nobody gets a free ticket in that regard. Because the flip side of allowing free conscience is that you've also got to allow for criticism. Unless views can be subjected to skeptical review, they will lead to bad or false conscience.
We're not far apart on that. I think we both believe in free speech, free right of dissent, and free conscience.
Athe
ists should be allowed to believe as their consciences lead. But Athe
ism is still irrational, and a belief unworthy of the human conscience. In that regard, Atheism is much like Scientology...those people also
have the right to believe it if their consciences lead them to do so; but it doesn't
make them right.
P.S. -- Have you given up on finding that one moral precept every Atheist must obey? If so, what conclusion must you now draw about Atheism? That it's totally amoral....for what else can it be?
