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20 Jul 2009 01:44 pm
Religion As Corrosive
by Patrick Appel
A reader somewhat answers the last reader's point:
I think the unfortunate thing about the Dish's coverage on this issue
is that you've failed to represent Dennett's (or other "grating"
atheists') full arguments justifying their combative approach to
religion. Personally, I'm a "grating" atheist
because of two deep concerns about the influence of religion in general
(i.e., religion as a concept). First, the vast majority of religious
people inculcate (or to put it another way, brainwash) their
intellectually defenseless children with their own beliefs, demanding
that the little ones believe these often ridiculous things to be true
with no logical or empirical evidence, which I am convinced undermines
children's development of logic and critical thinking.
Secondly, and more concretely, religion is the most pernicious cudgel
influencing policy. Because religious beliefs (e.g., homosexuality is
bad) are not held on account of logic or evidence (and perhaps also
because of the way religion has influenced adherents' critical thinking
skills), it is impossible for us to argue against them, yet their
consequences affect us all. Religion warps the policy sphere by
determining how people vote and shaping the media dialogue, since a
great number if not the majority of sincerely religious people seem
openly unwilling to concede that their own supernatural beliefs should
not be imposed upon the electorate in general. The marriage equality
debate is a perfect example of this, since all non-religious arguments
(i.e., the ones not revolving around the word "sacred,") that I have
heard against it are thoroughly specious. We can also reference the
nakedly religion-based support for the Bush administration displayed by
huge numbers of the Republican base, and ongoing local school board
revolutions intended to place ill-disguised creationist dogma into the
public school science curriculum. Meanwhile, pandering to the
religious crowd in policy debate merely reinforces their own biases
(and reasserts their entitlement to a national audience) and hence does
not usually result in any constructive compromise.
Thus, it is not merely that we atheists disapprove of people being
religious because we like to chide them for not yet discarding that
"crutch"... it's that we feel the violent political force of religion
shaping our laws and leadership on a daily basis, while a new legion of
young zealots is being indoctrinated with every generation.
This is an important point, but, in my opinion, whether religion is a net good or bad is much less obvious than this reader believes.
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