Belinda wrote: ↑Fri Aug 04, 2017 8:44 am
If I demonise another person I am casting them in the role of anger, spite, malevolence, ignorance, or some other such immorality. There is a demon, therefore, in my perception. To demonise another person is to attribute to them the
personification of some immorality.
Fine. But the concept of anything being bad comes from my worldview, not apparently from yours.
In a Materialist view, there is no "immorality." Nothing is objectively wrong. If one wants to do it and can do it, or if one does not care who objects, one simply does it. After that, there's nothing to be said, based on Materialist suppositions. "Demonizing," then, even were it actually being done, simply isn't "bad."

At least, that's what a Materialist has to think, in order to avoid hypocrisy. (Mind you, even hypocrisy cannot be "bad" and rational consistency or sincerity cannot be a virtue, since there are no such things rationalizable with a Materialist worldview.)
So it cannot be clear that the OP is claiming anything. From a Materialist perspective, it simply cannot be objectively "wrong" for anyone to "demonize" anything or anyone. But I doubt that anybody at all is being "demonized" anyway...as I say below.
Immanuel is not stupid or uninformed and does of course know all this. What I don't understand is why Immanuel Can doesn't speak up for theism instead of spuriously attacking atheists.

Now I'm amused! So, wait a minute...
A person identifies as an "A-theist." That is, he or she claims that there is but one certain thing in the world: that there is no God, or perhaps that there is no evidence for God. And hence, he or she is quite confident that all Theists are deluded. (S)he gets on line to propose this view of things. And now (s)he is
not attacking Theism?

Instead, (s)he's the
victim, and any criticism of that is "spurious," and undeserved. (S)he's a poor, innocent, helpless waif, assailed by the naughty Theists?
A little ironic, that. If Theists are accused of "demonizing" Atheists by disagreeing with them, what are the Atheists doing by self-identifying as antithetical to the Theists, and nothing more?

it's the one affirmative claim that "Atheists" make, by definition. By their own proud declaration, the sum of their ideology is a rejection of Theism. And according to their own line of defence, they've nothing more to defend, and not a thing more to offer the world.
Or course, this is the problem with the OP. The "demonization of Atheists" really means simply "the questioning of Atheism."
That's what's not wanted. The OP poster doesn't want his ideology to be subjected to any scrutiny or critique. He wants a philosophical "pass" for his prejudices, and an unqualified license to criticize Theism, and to position Theists as if they were the aggressors, it would seem. We can't think otherwise, given the wording of the OP.
But I need to point out here that nobody's making it personal, saying that
somebody who's an Atheist is evil: all we're saying is that
Atheism is a erroneous and dangerous ideology...and there's very little that one could say that has so much historical evidence to support it. Nevertheless, this is characterized by the OP as "demonization," and postulated as a
personal attack? At least, that's what the OP wants us to assume.
I would say this is simple nonsense. I submit to you that if an ideology is so foolish and weak that it has to go
ad hominem immediately, just to survive, and then has to protest its victimhood because it cannot stand to be scrutinized or criticized, then no "demonization" of it is necessary at all. It's manifestly a snowflake ideology. It can't take the heat of ordinary, reasonable philosophical scrutiny.
And I think that's pretty clear about Atheism. It doesn't stand up to the first level of criticism. But to say so is not to say anything about Atheists as people, so no one's being "demonized." There is nothing directed
to Atheists as persons being said, except that they haven't thought things through -- and that hardly qualifies as "demonization" of anyone. It sounds to me like ordinary philosophical-debating practice.