wyman, on 2013-January-07, 08:39, said:
Also, I don't know, Mike, whether you are suggesting that theism requires the refusal to think critically. I would strongly disagree with that. I think that even "religious belief" is far too broad for your statement to apply. Of course we could nitpick some tenets of Christianity, for example, that require the refusal to think critically, but if we start to shift more weight toward all Judeo-Christian teaching as parable and less toward the literal, things start to jive quite a bit more with our -- or at least my -- sense of reality.
Deism is far more plausible than any particular religion. We appear to have evolved in such a way as to have a desire for answers, for explanations. Science cannot yet and maybe never can provide a definitive answer for how the universe came into existence. It may make no sense to think in those terms, but that's the way our brains seem to work, so we look for an explanation.
If there was a 'prime mover', there is the logical problem of how that came into existence. So to me belief in a god, as prime mover, simply moves the question back one step and is no real answer at all. But I can see an argument in favour of there being some god concpet that explains how the universe came into existence.
Religion is something else altogether, especially the judeo-christian-islamic varieties.
Religion, in that sense, is very different. It posits not merely a deistic explanation but one that involves a entity with a number of human characteristics, including an overweaning need to be worshipped. It requires a belief, unfounded on evidence, that humanity is profoundly important in the universe. It requires a belief that, contrary to the best evidence, prayer is effective, altho any positive response appears to be, shall we say, capricious? It requires accepting as accurate, true and valid internally inconsistent and often implausible stories.
Now,if we were to treat the bible as simply a set of tales designed to provide us with a philosophical way to live our lives, that would be completely different. Altho I always wonder whether those who suggest such a view have actually read the whole bible, since the OT contains quite a few horrific 'moral' pointers. Just look at the brutual genocide mandated by god, and the list of offences that merit death. Look at the way women are treated. And so on. But no religion treats the bible in that secular way! Especially in the J-C-I tradition, the acceptance of dogma is required as is the practice of praying to this divine, but fortunately for us, probably imaginary entity. And the expenditure of countless dollars supporting an elaborate edifice built entirely on deception, often self-deception. And the creation of various levels of animosity towards those who don't belong to one's particualr creed or subset of a creed.
It seems to me that the apologists for the Xian religion pick and choose the 'nice' bits: the bits with which they agree, in order to say: see..it works as a moral guide.
Btw, there is a huge difference, at least imo, between belief and disbelief. Anyone who says that atheists are similar to believers doesn't, it seems to me, understand that I am ready to believe subject to the provision of evidence. Religious belief, we are often told, requires 'faith'. Faith is the anthithesis of reason. Indeed a number of religious leaders, over the years, have deplored the effect of reason on society, precisely because (tho they never explicitly frame it this way) it erodes their power over their followers. Change religion into an evidence-based process and the numbers of believers would likely drop rather dramatically.
There is arguably some evidence in support of deism. My take is that such 'evidence' is negative, not positive. Deism remains as possible, due to the unarguable fact of our existence and the lack of scientific explanation therefor. Thus this is the argument of the gaps, and I don't like it. But no religion can avail itself of even that thin reed, because all religions have specific (even if internally contradictory) details for which there is no logical argument or acceptable evidence.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari