Agree? — Art48
. When the atheist ask a believer to give up belief in God, — Art48
“I believe God exists. I also believe the Bible tells enormous lies about God. — Art48
that religions include tall tales which don't always reflect well on God. — Art48
Agree? — Art48
The existence of God cannot be proven no matter how strong the arguments may be. Likewise it cannot be disproven with 100% certainty — invicta
In short, given the choice of belief in God versus non-belief, believers often stick with God. But a believer may be much more receptive to arguments that label silly religious beliefs as lies about God. When the atheist ask a believer to give up belief in God, the result is that the believer often rejects the atheist’s argument and, if anything, believes more strongly. Thus, atheism, in some cases, helps reinforce religious belief. — Art48
People do find their way out of religion and the old arguments seem to lose their traction and believability, perhaps more so than atheist arguments gain appeal. — Tom Storm
Only insofar as many, maybe most, of the organizers, fundraisers & high officials of many, or most, religions tend to not practice what they preach as if 'g/G doesn't exist' to punish them for their frauds and other abuses. After all, what's a "religion" anyway? IMO, a conspiracy cult-driven pyramid scheme that feeds on an inexhaustible supply of earnestly gullible dupes &their brats.Atheism supports religion? — Art48
"Gain" works in this sentence as well as "lose." — Hanover
Many people have a deep need to believe in God. They need the comfort of believing their deceased loved ones still exist, that death isn’t the end, and that one day they will join their loved ones in heaven, that there is a protector who they can turn to in times of need, etc. They will not easily give up such comforting beliefs. So, when an atheist criticizes their religion, the believer may feel they have two choices: 1) give up belief in God, religion, and all the comforts that go with it, 2) or reject, ignore, or explain away what the atheist says. — Art48
I think that certain religious beliefs are less preposterous than others. But I doubt believers care whether they're more or less preposterous to others, and will be unimpressed by any argument that they're beliefs are unreasonable regardless of whether they're told there is no God or that particular beliefs about God are unsupportable. — Ciceronianus
:lol: :rofl:a conspiracy cult-driven pyramid scheme that feeds on an inexhaustible supply of earnestly gullible dupes & their brats. — 180 Proof
I've never thought any religious belief sounded any more "preposterous" than quantum mechanics. If you're in the mood for some pointless argument, there are plenty of reasonable arguments against religion, but preposterousness is not one of them. — T Clark
It wouldn't surprise me, though, if it's [QM] taken up by religious apologists and claimed by them to support their religious beliefs. It seems that's been the case for a while now. — Ciceronianus
Yeah, but QM is the kind of "preposterousness" that works whether or not anybody "believes in" it, unlike any religion. — 180 Proof
I suspect that those studying QM approach things a bit differently than religious believers. — Ciceronianus
When the atheist ask a believer to give up belief in God, — Art48
Yes, but s/he cannot be "indifferent" to "the parties of God" at home and abroad (i.e. proselytizing theists and anti-secular political movements like right-wing Evangelicals, fundamentalists and other wanna be theocrats, theofascists, et al).A real atheist would be indifferent to god. — TheMadMan
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