This whole thread is a straw man. What respectable moral philosopher has ever argued that belief in God is necessary for doing good? — Bartricks
My point remains that it is harder to imagine, plan and implement the murder of millions of people on an industrial scale -- e.g. the Holocaust -- within a traditional Christian (or Jewish, or Muslim) context than it is to do so within a secular context. — Olivier5
It depends on how you define "God". If we take God to be the supreme Good, then being good is acting in harmony with God. — Apollodorus
If "we take" then it is no God at all, but a human idea, and being good is acting is harmony with a human idea. — tim wood
Word games. What is "universal consciousness" if not at best, most, and least, collective human thought, aka, wishfully, wisdom.If God is a form of universal consciousness, then the higher ideas or ideals of man are expressions of the mind of God. — Apollodorus
as a matter of fact (you may hold what beliefs you like) is whatever "God" refers to altogether a creation of human intellect and nothing else? Or is it something else? — tim wood
is facile, and in a bad way. X is a question philosophy has aimed to answer for a very long time and the debate is still ongoing. Try substituting different things for X, and you will get a sense of the absurdity and what an insult it is.this is a question that philosophy has aimed to answer for a very long time and the debate is still ongoing. — Apollodorus
Traditional Christians did pretty well. And Muslims. As to the modern industrial scale, that took modernity. But the potential for murderousness, it appears, has always been there. — tim wood
If we take God to be the supreme Good, then being good is acting in harmony with God. — Apollodorus
Have you noticed the number of God posts rising again? — Banno
From the article cited in the OP, to which scant attention has been paid ... — Banno
With or without religion, good people can behave well and bad people can do evil; but for good people to do evil - that takes religion. — Steven Weinberg
don't see how you can argue that when the Nazi's drew on centuries of Christianity's antisemitism even Martin Luther's well known fulminations against Jews.
— Tom Storm
Centuries during which the Church was more often than not trying to protect Jews from the greed of the powerful and the prejudice of the masses.
Not to mention a 99% Christian nation supported Hitler.
So, since China is in majority atheist and their people support a ruthless and racist dictatorship, it reflects poorly on atheism?
even Martin Luther's well known fulminations against Jews
Just because warmongers often brandish religious reasons does not mean they are motivated by religion. The Nazis used Martin Luther to rally the masses, instrumentally, like they used Darwin or Wagner. It does not follow that their ideology was inherently Lutheran, Darwinian or Wagnerian. — Olivier5
where in the Bill of Rights? — tim wood
I am saying that the ethos of the Nazi's draws source material in the Christian tradition — Tom Storm
↪Banno In other words, your claim is
To be good -> To believe in God — TheMadFool
Unfortunately God doesn’t say how to act, people say how to act, and people aren’t God (supreme Good). — praxis
Your point was that Nazi's were only possible because they removed the Judeo Christian tradition from culture — Tom Storm
It was inspired by an ideology that was resolutely modern and secular, a form of social Darwinism. — Olivier5
Banno In other words, your claim is
To be good -> To believe in God
— TheMadFool
That' s exactly wrong. — Banno
Marx was not a racist, and certainly not an antisemite. You seem a bit confused. — Olivier5
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