Quote from: HHC on May 30, 2014, 01:06 AMQuote from: Mablak on May 23, 2014, 06:41 AM"The West achieved dominance in the world when atheism didn't even exist yet" Really? Atheism has always existed.
Not really. Perhaps one or two individuals prior to the 17th century can be considered real atheists, the rest all worshipped a diety or recognized the existence of some form of higher principle.
There were very few open atheists, because atheists used to be persecuted and killed. Surely you don't literally mean 'one or two' atheists, here's a handful of atheists from ancient Greece, and these are just the prominent ones: http://atheism.about.com/od/atheismhistory/a/AncientGreeceSkepticism.htm. Also, I don't know why you're lumping in 'worshiping a deity' with 'recognizing a higher principle'. Most atheists I know have principles, and good ones at that.
Quote from: HHC on May 30, 2014, 01:06 AM
Faith can bring people together. It's a unifying factor. Sure, you still got the flag, and the anthem, and Stephen Colbert... but you no longer share a common spiritual life, a common 'idea' of the world. The christian worldview is far more than just a set of silly rules & beliefs, it erects an entire universe that is both of this world and outside of this world. The word 'church' not only refers to a concrete place of worship, but also to a metaphysical gathering of believers. Through the ceremonies people worldwide come together under Christ.
You need to dispel this notion of Christians having particularly 'common' beliefs; there are literally tens of thousands of different denominations of Christianity, and there's no way to resolve their differences in belief because they're based on different--often times equally plausible--interpretations of the Bible. Regardless, movements such as humanism do involve uniting under common ideas, and focus on morality without relying on any supernatural beings. Secular moral systems are in fact amenable to argument, and because of this, tend to converge on common moral ideas, whereas religious moral systems are not, and tend to diverge.
Quote from: HHC on May 30, 2014, 01:06 AM
People may still behave in an atheist society, but the sense of union will be much weaker and people will mostly go about their things whichever way they see fit. .. That or search their mystical union & salvation in secular religions like national-socialism, communism or any other utopian movement that ultimately ends up in massmurder.
Not sure what you're arguing here, atheists have weaker bonds between family and friends? Why would you think that? And I would point out that humanism is the biggest secular movement, and isn't showing any signs of inching towards mass murder.
Quote from: HHC on May 30, 2014, 01:06 AM
You know exactly what is true and what isn't?
Pretty damn sure at least 20% of your scientific views will be proven wrong in the future.
I don't see why believing in God is harmful per se. Even if it turns out to be a false belief.
Do you have proof that people who are christian suffer more than those who aren't?
I can only speak for myself... but ae, I'm envious of people who believe in God, cause my complete and utter nihilistic views on life & afterlife are anything but a blessing.
I figured you were a Christian, you're not? That 20% (if this were accurate) is why rational belief is tentative belief, I simply believe what makes the most sense for the time being, and if I'm wrong, I revise those beliefs. Religious belief, on the other hand, admits no possibility of revising your beliefs if they happen to be wrong, and is dogmatic. If a god turns out to be a false belief, that would imply many of the average believer's actions were either harmful, or not as helpful as they could have been. If you believe homosexuality is wrong, that masturbation is a sin, that slavery is morally permissible, etc, because you thought the Bible was the word of a god who knew what was best for us, these beliefs would have been made and acted upon in error, and really would have been harmful. And I didn't say Christians suffer more than atheists.
Quote from: HHC on May 30, 2014, 01:06 AMQuoteBut the claim in question was HHC's. If we're looking purely at the positives that religion creates for society, there's little evidence that those positives exceed what the non-religious do. Regardless of which religious organization you want to focus on, the fact remains that by any estimations I've seen, the majority of the average religious organization's money goes towards other factors such as operating expenses, rather than direct charity, and thus the original graph I posted is accurate enough.
You are trying to convert an immaterial asset to material means.
You cannot put a price on things like hope, unity & spiritual salvation.
I'm trying to get an objective measure of generosity, yes. It's not perfect, but it's actual evidence. Plenty of atheists have hope and unity (and don't need salvation since we recognize we're not inherently 'sinners'). And if you really 'can't put a price' on these things, i.e. measure them in any way, then that would mean you can't compare the levels of hope and unity between the religious and non-religious, meaning you would have no argument that the religious actually are more hopeful, unified, etc.