TagliatelliMonster
Veteran Member
Why did you Change your world view?
This forum is full of theists that used to be atheist, atheists that used to be theists, Christians that used to be Jews, Creationists that used to be Evolutionists, etc.
So if you have changed your religious world view I would like to know what was the “thing” that convinced you that you where wrong,
In my particular Case, I used to be a YEC, in my mind the strongest and irrefutable argument for a flood was the fact that there where flood legends with parallels all over the world, to me it was obvious that all these legends had a common source, and this source had to be the actual event (a global flood)
Then I realized that the supposed parallels where vague and that the stories were in no way similar to the story reported in the bible. The exception would be Flood Legends in the middle east, but that can be explain by claiming that both legends where “quoting” from a common legend (not necessarily the event)
Then slowly but surely I began to notice that I was using the same logic that fanatics atheist use to support YEC. Things like “avoid the burden proof at all cost” “reject scientific consensus just because there are a few small holes u}in our knowledge, contradictions, conspiracy theories, raise the bar unrealistically to high when it comes to evidence that contradict my view, etc.
Then I simply decided that this logic was flawed. And had no option but to reject YEC.
I say I never had any "worldview altering" experience.
I was raised in a secular way. You can call that "atheist" if you want. It's atheist in the sense that religion and gods simply never came up. I was aware of its existance around the world off course. I remember not really caring. I simply accepted it was part of some people's culture / background.
I remember as an 8-year old at public school... there were optional religious christian classes. And then there was this one guy in our class who took an optional islamic class. There was this teacher that came all the way to our school to teach that one dude an hour a week in islam.
He was the only morrocon. We notice that off course. We also didn't really care / talked about it. It made sense to us - he was morrocon and thus from another culture and had different habbits etc. We accepted that and it was fine.
I was aware of the kind of stories that were found in those books. I always assumed that people understood that they were just stories - like poetry or something. It was only during high school and transferred to a catholic school that I really began to be instructed in a religious bible class. Before that, everything I knew about it were bits and pieces cobbled together through the stories or "lore" associated with our holidays like christmass and easter. These bible stories in religious class were mostly presented as metaphorical with a "moral of the story" type thing and we'ld read it and discuss it. Much like one would do in a literature art class
Still a bit later, I learned that there were people in the world that took all this stuff literally. And quite radically. To the point of it creating problems and them fighting and lobbying over things. Then there's the much more violent islamic version thereof.
Perhaps that realisation comes closest to what I'ld call is a "worldview defining moment", when it comes to me stance on religions.
As a kid, I saw it as harmless cultural lore / heritage. Like Greek and Viking mythology. Full of colour, melodrama, "wisdom", etc.
As I grew older, I came to see it more like an obstacle to human development. Which can intensify to the point of being a straight up danger to human development and humans themselves.