Btw, I only read part 1.
With regard to doubt and inquiry. What he is saying is probably applicable to people who know relatively little of doubt. In fact his message sounds similar to that of Socrates - 'question everything'. However, if we take this process of questioning seriously, and never stifle our doubts as this fellow suggests, we will eventually come to a point where there are no answers, and our belief will fall to pieces. Here's a more poetic passage from Nietzsche, in the same vain. (The Birth of Tragedy)
Faith is much stronger than reason, however, and in this is both its strength and its weakness. Strength because it means that we are inspired to believe, in spite of what the rational atheists tell us. Weakness because, as you have said, it can easily lead to violence, such as the crusades, jihad, etc, in spite of what the calm voice of reason tells us.
All things considered though, the article could well be taken to heart by many a person who does not feel the spur of doubt within themselves.
Edit: Oh and I forgot to mention, that that little picture about the persectued christians is trash.
Whether the evidence is sufficient enough for a certain belief is entirely up to the believer. What is sufficient evidence to some is insufficient to others. It would be impossible to get people to agree on what constitutes 'sufficient evidence'....it is wrong always, everywhere, and for anyone, to believe anything upon insufficient evidence.
With regard to doubt and inquiry. What he is saying is probably applicable to people who know relatively little of doubt. In fact his message sounds similar to that of Socrates - 'question everything'. However, if we take this process of questioning seriously, and never stifle our doubts as this fellow suggests, we will eventually come to a point where there are no answers, and our belief will fall to pieces. Here's a more poetic passage from Nietzsche, in the same vain. (The Birth of Tragedy)
If I was to critically examine my belief in God, it would easily fall to pieces. After all, what rational basis is there for believing in God's existance? To my mind, all the arguments are tenuous....science, spurred by its powerful illusion, speeds irresistibly towards its limits where its optimism, concealed in the essence of logic, suffers shipwreck. For the periphery of the circle of science has an infinite number of points; and while there is no telling how this circle could ever be surveyed completely, noble and gifted men nevertheless reach, e'er half their time and inevitably, such boundary points on the periphery from which one gazes into what defies illumination. When they see to their horror how logic coils up at these boundaries and finally bites its own tail—suddenly the new form of insight breaks through, tragic insight which, merely to be endured, needs art as a protection and remedy.
Faith is much stronger than reason, however, and in this is both its strength and its weakness. Strength because it means that we are inspired to believe, in spite of what the rational atheists tell us. Weakness because, as you have said, it can easily lead to violence, such as the crusades, jihad, etc, in spite of what the calm voice of reason tells us.
All things considered though, the article could well be taken to heart by many a person who does not feel the spur of doubt within themselves.
Edit: Oh and I forgot to mention, that that little picture about the persectued christians is trash.
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