Tag: darwin
Susi Neunmalklug - Come to the US!
by Zephyr on Mar.04, 2009, under Atheism, Video
…and cool hair! This is pretty cool, actually. Come to America, Susi! School our school kids.
No Higher Purpose…
by Zephyr on Feb.13, 2009, under Atheism, Religion, Science & Technology, Society, Video
via: Atheist Media Blog
At the very end of this, you get this gem: “…and which suggests that the universe is essentially purposeless and undirected, and one where people have perfect moral freedom to do exactly what they want because there’s no higher purpose to which they’re accountable.”
Every time I hear this argument I bristle. Again, it is a denunciation of the power of mankind. By announcing that we MUST absolutely have a higher authority to respond to otherwise we’ll go bonkers and do all sorts of crazy things, we’re saying that we have little to no faith in ourselves. Mature humans are smart enough and reasonable enough to understand that actions have reactions associated with them. You can’t just run about and murder everyone you don’t like, or someone you don’t like is going to murder you. You can’t go around stealing everyone’s money because eventually someone will steal your money. Then, there’s empathy with others, a trait, again, shared by mature humans. If you hurt someone in some less tangible way, say by cheating on them in a relationship, you empathize with their pain and naturally think ‘what if I were in her shoes’?
I think, personally, that religion short-circuits our natural ability to form natural morals by giving people an easy out. That’s why you see people running into crowds and blowing themselves up in the name of god, but you don’t see atheists doing the same thing. If you’re religiously motivated to something it’s right, even if the rest of your nature-given intelligence tells you otherwise.
Then there’s purpose. Purpose is something given to you, either by yourself or by another human being. If your ‘purpose’ is to earn enough brownie points with god to get into heaven, that’s not something divinely attached to you. It’s given to you through your church which is run by humans, not deities. Those of us without belief in god still believe in purpose just as that definition – it’s just that we give ourselves our own purpose rather than waiting for someone else to come along and give it to us for us. Again, in this case, religion short-circuits nature.
Evolving Disbelief
by Zephyr on Feb.12, 2009, under Atheism, Religion, Science & Technology, Society
So today is Darwin Day, and I’ve been mulling over in my head for the past couple of weeks just what I wanted to say in this post. I’m not a scientist by any means, and my understanding of Darwin goes as far back as high school, wich is around 15 years ago. I’m reading ‘Why Evolution is True‘, but I don’t have a whole lot of time to read these days, being busy with work and a few other hobbies. So, I stumbled along with idea after idea until something finally dawned on me… it’s something I’m sort of working slowly up to in my Losing My Religion series here at Frivology. The series is about all of the different religions I hopped in and out of before I finally found peace in no religion and no belief, but the underlying theme to it is a personal bit of anecdotal evidence that there are certain people in this world who are hard-wired to be atheists. Natural born atheists, so to speak… and I have to wonder, are human beings evolving into disbelief?
About a year ago, I listened to Julia Sweeney’s ‘Letting Go of God’. It moved me because Julia described all of the different beliefs she went through before she allowed herself to stop believing. I did much the same thing. Also like her, I wanted desperately to be a part of the moving ritual and beauty that religion can offer the world. I, however, was cognitive enough of my own disbelief that I spent a great deal of time lying about what I felt. I lied and said that I was wounded and needed Christianity to heal me. I lied and said that I felt the warmth of God. I lied and said that I felt the love of the Goddess… so on and so forth. Some part of me knew I was lying, yet I craved the companionship, warmth and peace that so many “believers” seemed to have. For me, though, I didn’t get that peace until I finally completely let go and admitted that I didn’t believe. From the beginning, I never believed - couldn’t believe. I was always meant to be an atheist. It dawned on me, then, that I probably wasn’t alone. Whatever made other people believe just wasn’t part of me.
9/11 Made Richard Dawkins Bold
by Zephyr on Jan.12, 2009, under Atheism
My my, that Atheist bus campaign sure is stirring up quite a bit of conversation off in the land of the UK. I only wish it was happening here, too. Unfortunately, the former Archbishio of Canterbury has it somewhat wrong:
“I have no doubt that one can trace a direct link from 9/11 to the aggressive and strident tones of such writers as Christopher Hitchens, Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, Sam Harris, and others. The result is a widening gap between religion and science; an unwillingness to engage, concluding in a dialogue of the deaf.”
I’d say this statement is at least partially accurate. At least for us in the US (where the attack actually happened), it was as it someone took a baseball bat to a hornet’s nest that had been slowly building for a few decades. After 9/11, the fundamentalists couldn’t be shut up and any chance at us all living together and peacefully minding each other’s religions went out the window.
