freeinfidel

Atheism, civil liberties, privacy and other freedoms


Authentically happy? Only without religion

January 14, 2008 By: DK Category: belief, faith, religion 4 Comments →

Once programmed by the self-loathing rituals of religion, can you ever be truly happy? Guilt, low self-esteem and a permanent sense of inadequacy are integral components of many religions. And maybe when they’ve got you, they’ve got you for ever.

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Voice of god? Or just plain nuts?

January 08, 2008 By: Steve Category: belief, faith, religion No Comments →

A murderer, who may have eaten part of his victim, now says that god told him to do it. How do we know whether this is true? And if he’s lying, why does he think this is a good thing to say?

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Too willing to believe

January 06, 2008 By: Steve Category: belief, faith 1 Comment →

It seems as though another miracle worker may turn out to be nothing but a fraud. We all long for the fantastic in our lives, but attributing events to miracles is self-deluding and often dangerous. The rational mind is a better defence against life’s dangers, and when it’s applied, miracles appear to dissolve away.

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We all die atheists

December 30, 2007 By: Steve Category: Atheism, belief No Comments →

In our last instant of life, I have a hunch that we all have a moment of revelation. And I think it is this: it’s all over, there’s nothing else.

Even those people who might have been screaming for a priest a minute before, who might have seen the white light approaching (a common phenomenon with near-death experiences and therefore almost certainly some neurological effect), who have even uttered the name of their favourite deity or prophet - yes, even these people must know as the final few cells shut down that it is all over. No heaven. No hell. No harps or virgins. No coming face to face with Jesus.

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Is atheism a religion?

December 19, 2007 By: Steve Category: Atheism, belief, faith, religion 3 Comments →

It’s a common accusation by believers, who feel threatened by non-believers, that atheism is ‘just a religion too’. So is it? Well, not by any sensible definition…

But let’s look at that accusation first. You have to admit, it’s very funny. Basically, it’s saying, “Well, you’re just as bad as we are”. Beyond the hilarity, let’s see if there’s any truth in it.

There’s a problem because defining ‘religion’ is a notoriously slippery task. However, the miscellaneous faithful over at Religious Tolerance think they have a handle on it. Their definition is:

“Religion is any specific system of belief about deity, often involving rituals, a code of ethics, a philosophy of life, and a worldview.”

They go on to say that, “A worldview is a set of basic, foundational beliefs concerning deity, humanity and the rest of the universe.” And they further explain that:

“We also include Agnosticism, Atheism, Humanism, Ethical Culture etc. as religions, because they also contain a ‘belief about deity’. Their belief is that they do not know whether a deity exists, or they have no knowledge of God, or they sincerely believe that God does not exist.”

Hmm. Not very convincing, is it?

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A very personal revelation

December 12, 2007 By: Steve Category: Atheism, belief No Comments →

I remember clearly the moment I became an atheist. I was 10 years old when I suddenly realised that there was no good reason to believe in god or Jesus. That realisation has been a strength to me ever since.

It was all because of an argument. One sunny day, a friend and I were walking home from primary school. For some reason, now lost in time, we were arguing about whether Jesus was ‘real’. I was stoutly defending the historical truth of the Christ story while he was saying that it was all ‘made up’.

Not that I was what you would call ‘religious’. My family were not believers. My mother survived the allied bombing of Hamburg, and you don’t come out of that both sane and religious. I had, though, absorbed the unconscious, unthinking social conventions of believing that god was up there somewhere, that Jesus was real and that Christmas was great.

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Have Your Say at the BBC

December 07, 2007 By: Steve Category: Atheism, belief, faith 3 Comments →

The BBC’s Have Your Say programme will be interviewing Dr Richard Dawkins. You have the opportunity to post messages to the good doctor - go here to post your question or make your statement.

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How can you be so sure?

October 10, 2007 By: Steve Category: Atheism, belief, religion No Comments →

This is something an atheist hears a lot from believers. When I explain that, no, I’m not agnostic, I don’t believe in god at all, the response is likely to be, ‘How can you be so sure?’. It’s often accompanied by a patronising or pitying smile, as if to say, ‘You’ll be sorry if you’re wrong’.

This is, of course, tied to the old, rather solipsistic, argument that it’s better to play safe and believe in god - that way, if he does exist you won’t have pissed him off during your life and you’ll be safe after death. It’s rather like sucking up to the boss even if you secretly believe you’ll never get that promotion.

Atheists have nothing to gain during life and everything to lose after death, the argument runs. Aside from the fact that the first part of that assertion is so completely wrong (atheists gain an immense freedom of thought and action by not being dictated to and limited by religious dogma), the argument is fatally flawed - to a level that makes it idiotic - by the fact that it presupposes one god.

Of course, true believers are certain that there is only one god - theirs. A Roman Catholic knows that Muslims, Jews - in fact, everyone but Roman Catholics - are backing the wrong horse. What they don’t seem to acknowledge, or are too afraid to consider, is that maybe they are wrong - that even if they spend their lives in deep devotion, regularly flagellate and abase themselves, give up any pretense at rational or free thought, they might still go to hell for having picked on the wrong deity.

Indeed, the question - ‘how can you be so sure?’ - is revealing. Believers are people who need certainties. That is why they will accept an entire system of belief even though it contains many palpable absurdities. A rigid system of thought helps exclude the scary possibilities that life, before and after death, is uncertain. Just recite the catechism, perform the rituals and whatever you do, don’t think for yourself.

How can I be so sure? Simple. There is no need to believe in god, there is no evidence for god, there is no rational line of thought that leads to god and his existence is so profoundly improbable.