Subject: aye, that's the one
Author:
Posted on: 2009-06-02 15:25:00 UTC

I'll grant you there's no problem in believing per se, so long as you're not buggering anyone else about in the process. But Dawkins's main point revolves around this:

If it leads people to become better because they're making themselves think they have to be to avoid damnation, then good.

This is reminiscent of the notion expressed by many believers that morality comes from their god. Dawkins thinks that we shouldn't be good because, effectively, we're scared of monsters under the bed or retribution from a higher authority. He thinks we have the capacity to be moral without any gods at all.

A parallel, if it helps: say you've hurt me in a major way, and I want to kill you as vengeance. I might not kill you because my god would punish me, or I might not kill you because I know killing's wrong. The effect is the same, and your mileage may vary, but I for one would rather the latter than the former.

And I'm with you on the bias of people, but the bit that irks me is when someone thinks it's divinely inspired, and still disregards it.

Tattoos are wrong? Where's it say that?

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