blackout
Violet.
"Should we respect religions and the religious?"
religions? no.
the religious? no more or less than anyone else.
It's always best to treat others with love and respect.
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"Should we respect religions and the religious?"
religions? no.
the religious? no more or less than anyone else.
It's always best to treat others with love and respect.
I feel people should be respected until they show they do not deserve it, but ideas should not. I respect peoples right to believe what they want, but I do not necessarily respect their beliefs. To say that I do would be disingenuous. Basically, I respect your right to believe as you will, but if I feel what you believe is stupid, I will say so and cite reasons why. And I will blaspheme any god I choose, I only respect the people, not their deities.
Don't get me wrong, I don't go around being intentionally hateful, but religion gets far too much leeway in this regard.
Defense would be a natural reaction for someone who had a fist in his mouthWell, were you to encounter someone from a culture that practices pedophilia, your reaction to their cultural norm would only put them on the defensive, and cause them to likewise close their minds to your way of thinking.
I would rather have a meaningful dialog with a frog.Your own disgust would render you useless at engaging them in a meaningful dialogue that might change their minds. And barring such persuasion, you'd be left with either putting up with their cultural proclivities or fighting to force them to stop.
When you set the ideas that you already hold up as the criteria by which everyone else's ideas are judged and evaluated, you adopt a position for yourself that you don't rightly deserve and can't rightly defend. And in so doing you give everyone else proper reason to ignore your judgments.But I have no ethical obligation to respect someone elses reasoning even if it does lead to something successful.
When you set the ideas that you already hold up as the criteria by which everyone else's ideas are judged and evaluated, you adopt a position for yourself that you don't rightly deserve and can't rightly defend. And in so doing you give everyone else proper reason to ignore your judgments.
When I see that your ears have closed, I have no reason to speak.
Then why aren't you at peoples forums instead of religious forums?
Just curious.
You might find a lot less stupid people who believe in a deity.
But anyway give it your best shot and dazzle us with your brilliance and intellect , your deepest thoughts on the origin of man. The destination of man.
The idea that harming others is wrong is itself an idea. And like all ideas it can be discussed, debated, and can be found to be flawed.Thank you for hanging in there with me as long as you did.
There are examples on RF where somebody has demonstrated to me that my ideas were wrong and I have reversed my thinking. My ears are not always closed.
I'm wondering if one of our major disagreements is whether or not truth exists. I know you have stopped talking to me, but maybe you will chew on this. Once we have determined that some behaviour will harm others, do we need to rediscover the truth of that idea over and over again?
later gator
-bathsheba
I think it's important that when we encounter these ideas, that we engage them, and the only way to do that effectively is with respect.
Ideas, in themselves, are harmless.
What society accepts or doesn't accept has little to do with the value of an idea. Concensus is just one aspect of many that deserve consideration. Also, no two people will hold the exact same ideas. The complexity is too great. Much of human interaction is spent in defining our ideas to each other, before we can even begin to debate them. I have found it to very often be the case that someone closes their mind to ideas that they think the other person holds, and so never bothers to listen long enough to discover that this was not the other person's idea at all. One has to take the time to hear an idea before he can reasonably decide to object to it.Society has already determined that they don’t accept these ideas, pedophillia & murder, as having value and deserving respect. I recommend not being so open minded that your brains fall out.
Such self-righteous emotionalism is probably responsible for a lot more human pain and suffering than the ideas that you get so emotional about.Usually I get frustrated with rubber-neckers at a train wreck, but I must say, I would love to rubber-neck the respectful discussion you might have with a 50 year old man arguing for the right to have sex with a 10 year old girl. And then I would probably throw up.
Such self-righteous emotionalism is probably responsible for a lot more human pain and suffering than the ideas that you get so emotional about.
I think self-righteous emotionalism leads to closed minds and poor (often violent) reactions. It's exactly when our self-righteous emotionalism slams the doors of our minds shut that we find ourselves with little recourse left but capitulation, which we will not tolerate, and force (often violent force) against those people and ideas that we have deemed unacceptable. It's self-righteous emotionalism that underpins most of what we call "patriotism", and nationalism, and that fuels wars between nations and cultures. It's self-righteous emotionalism that underpins much of what we'd call racism, sexism, and religious bigotry. Which in turn fuels more wars and violence between nations, and cultures and their peoples. It's exactly that closing of the mind in righteous disgust that is the precursor to more extreme and disastrous behaviors.How on earth can you equate the pain produced by self-righteous emotionalism with the pain produced by rape and murder?
I think self-righteous emotionalism leads to closed minds and poor (often violent) reactions. It's exactly when our self-righteous emotionalism slams the doors of our minds shut that we find ourselves with little recourse left but capitulation, which we will not tolerate, and force (often violent force) against those people and ideas that we have deemed unacceptable. It's self-righteous emotionalism that underpins most of what we call "patriotism", and nationalism, and that fuels wars between nations and cultures. It's self-righteous emotionalism that underpins much of what we'd call racism, sexism, and religious bigotry. Which in turn fuels more wars and violence between nations, and cultures and their peoples. It's exactly that closing of the mind in righteous disgust that is the precursor to more extreme and disastrous behaviors.
We should respect people's right to hold the views they do providing they don't cause harm to others. As for respecting the religions themselves, I think we have every right to challenge their doctrines!
Yes, I do. I respect it, and even participate in it occasionally. But I also can see how it can be wrong, counter-productive, and dangerous .Do you respect the idea of self-righteous emotionalism?