The opposite of faith is doubt, and yes, doubt deserves respect.It was asked along with a video if faith deserved respect so I am going to post the other question:
Does non-faith deserve respect?
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The opposite of faith is doubt, and yes, doubt deserves respect.It was asked along with a video if faith deserved respect so I am going to post the other question:
Does non-faith deserve respect?
Your name should be fantome profound. Well said!fantôme profane;1364875 said:Good answer. People deserve respect simply because they are people. However ideas do not deserve respect simply because they are ideas (even though they are ideas of people). If upon due consideration you find that someones non-faith reasonable and well thought out and that it leads them to act in a reasonable manner, then I think that is deserving of respect. If on the other hand you honestly believe that someones non-faith is unreasonable and leads to unreasonable actions, then it is not deserving respect. Ideas must be evaluated, considered, judged. If we decide in advance deserve respect, faith ideas or non-faith ideas, then these ideas cannot possibly be judged as they should be.
Many people think that if we want to show people respect we must automatically respect their ideas. But the truth is just the opposite. If we want to show people respect then we should listen to what they have to say, consider and judge their ideas on the merit of those ideas. If we cannot do this then we cannot show people the respect they deserve.
My answer is simple: I do my best to give simple respect to all people.
Answer (to both questions) "no"It was asked along with a video if faith deserved respect so I am going to post the other question:
Does non-faith deserve respect?
It was asked along with a video if faith deserved respect so I am going to post the other question:
Does non-faith deserve respect?
I think you mix "respect" with "tolerance" here.All "religious" states must be respected to some degree for the greater good. This strengthens freedom of religion. Which ideally would work better if taken to heart instead of letter of law. To be religious or not to be religious both freedoms must be respected.
tomspug said:Non-faith deserves nothing, because it is the absence of belief.
A person who don't believe in god, do have a "belief" that god doesn't exist.
It was asked along with a video if faith deserved respect so I am going to post the other question:
Does non-faith deserve respect?
Nobody is arguing that atheism is a religion, so please, stop abusing the analogy.
A negative belief is still a belief.
I think you mix "respect" with "tolerance" here.
No need to raise your testosterone levels so fast my friend. No offense meant.I most certainly did not. If you have something to say then use your own words. Don't piggy back off mine.
The law doesnt say that you must respect, the law says you must tolerate. In my view respect can't be ordered anyway. It is something that has to be earned. So the "must be respected" doesn't work in my view. BTW i see no sense in respecting nonsense and surely you will agree that there is some nonsense in some faiths.All "religious" states must be respected to some degree for the greater good. This strengthens freedom of religion. Which ideally would work better if taken to heart instead of letter of law. To be religious or not to be religious both freedoms must be respected.
No need to raise your testosterone levels so fast my friend. No offense meant.
Perhaps i am simply wrong. But thats the way i understood your words here:
The law doesnt say that you must respect, the law says you must tolerate. In my view respect can't be ordered anyway. It is something that has to be earned. So the "must be respected" doesn't work in my view. BTW i see no sense in respecting nonsense and surely you will agree that there is some nonsense in some faiths.
Secondly i do not see how respect for someones faith would strengthen freedom of religion. I think tolerance strengthens freedom of religion. By the way i also think that it strengthens freedom FROM religion.
The term "greater good" is not in my vocabulary.
This might be. After all nobody is perfect. And not everybody speaks english as a native language.It's clear you did not understand my post.
If i had not read it, I wouldn't have answered. I see no sense in idle talk.Your reply here makes me wonder if you even read it.
This might be. After all nobody is perfect. And not everybody speaks english as a native language.
If i had not read it, I wouldn't have answered. I see no sense in idle talk.
If YOU are really interested in talk then perhaps you should try to do so without being so inapropriately snippy.
Its your decision.
You can explain to me where i supposedly erred and what you intended to say, or you can simply discard me as a fool and we need not talk any longer.
I don't think ordered respect will bring us any further.Consider my "inapropriately snippy" remarks an example of how far mere lawfully bound tolerance will get us.
Cwill bring us any further.
And as long as we don't harm each other i have no problem with the way it is.
But perhaps i simply don't understand the term respect correctly. I see it like the definition here: "Respect is esteem for, or a sense of the worth or excellence of a person, a personal quality or ability, or something considered as a manifestation of a personal quality or ability."
So for me pure belief in something is something worthy. It depends on WHAT you believe.
For me it is rather simple.... i tolerate each ones belief and i think everyone has a right to his belief. I don't respect each ones belief just because it is a belief. Just as i don't respect each ones opinion while i tolerate it. It would amaze me if you really were different concerning the "respect" issue.