Re: Do you believe is God?
i didnt say everyone, i was just generalising. appologies for that. but you have as little grounds for making that judgement as i have of making otherwise.
I have evidence of the conversion of both resolute atheists and theists. You do not have evidence of the contrary. I'm not saying it's easy to change peoples minds, or that it happens all the time, but it does happen. And unlike you, I don't make unfalsifiable claims as to why this happens.
your so keen to point out the negative repercussions of a religious persons beliefs. would it really be that ludicrous for me to suggest that some degree of religious faith is not actually a bad thing but a good thing?
Strawman much? I never suggested otherwise. Faith is, by definition, a gamble, and is therefore bound to have positive and negative repercussions. This does not in turn justify religion, which indeed does not have a monopoly on faith. A secular humanist might have a faith in the good will of humanity. Faith is important to some, but religious faith is only necessary for the purpose of religion.
maybe you are right to suggest that about the fickle minded, but in proving to them otherwise what difference is it really going to make. wouldnt a fickle minded person still be as easily 'persuaded by any number of moral discourses' as a non-believer as they would as a believer?
which just goes to show how ridiculous morality is (see theories of truth)
correct me if im mistaken but as a human being im assuming you have some degree of personal morals even if you dont realise that many of these morals have some form of religious origins.
I can't be sure of my personal morals. But why do you assume a religious origin, and if this is the case, where did religious morals originate from?
likewise politics based on religious/moral ideals are not always negative in nature. republican congressman ron paul for example. his political ideals convey an anti-war, humanitarian and somewhat idealisitc stance which, despite its questionable qualities, is still mostly commendable irrespective of its religious origins.
Ron Paul's political morality is based on Jeffersonian republicanism and the natural laws of liberty. In this he differs remarkably from his colleagues that share his Baptist morality yet endorse far different policies. He is commendable for his consistency and humanitarian values, not his religious morality, which may have informed them.
Religion when misinterpreted is troublesome. what it originally intends is not. i would think you would be more successful in helping people interpret their religious faiths correctly than by proving otherwise.
Correct interpretations? Rubbish. What right have you to declare that any person of faith "isn't doing it right." There are no objective conditions to determine this. Of course, different persons can communicate their beliefs and try to explain why they think others are doing it wrong, but this debases the notion of absolute moral truth (which is rather moral debate).
oh and just for the record, i know you probably dont care, but my beliefs may not qualify me as an apatheist but i highly doubt i qualify as a nihilist either.
I didn't say you were a nihilist. I said that rather than an apathetic attitude, you, you exhibit a nihilistic approach (despair, hopelessness, nothing we can do about it, people will be people). You think there's nothing that can be done about it and religious morality is absolutely entrenched (explain the worldwide rise in nonbelief) whereas an apatheist is not interesting in accepting or denying claims that god does or doesn't exist due to the practical irrelevance of such existence. I agree with this apatheist position - it doesn't matter whether god exists, however it matters that people believe in all sorts of other gods anyways, and in doing so perpetually impose on others.