Jump to content

Bad criticisms of religion


Night FM

Recommended Posts

I'll start with this:

"Religion is about control or preventing people from doing things they like" - This is a terrible criticism since the laws of any nation or state are about "control", and this isn't necessarily a bad thing. (In fact, many modern laws developed out of older, religious sources of law). Obviously a rapist "likes" to rape his victims, and the laws against rape prevent him from doing something "he likes", but most would agree that this is a good thing, and that not everything some person somewhere may "like" to do (e.x. rape, murder, etc) should be allowed.

"Religion is about legislating morality". - This is a derivation of the above. Laws against rape and murder are "legislating morality", and this is a good thing. The issue isn't "legislating morality", only "what or whose morality" is being legislated. (e.x. most would agree that a law forcing people to attend Catholic mass wouldn't be the same as a law forcing people not to murder).

"Religion is about making money". - This could be said about anything, including science. Selling popular science books is in part about "making money", but that doesn't delegitimize their content, and scientific industries would have to have a way of "making money" to stay in business. Being profitable doesn't mean that something is "only" about making money, or making money at the expense of everything else.

Edited by Night FM
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Religion is easy to deny bc it generally needs a god to be the arbiter of, whatever...

God is an easy target, bc it can't exist...

If you want religion to make sense to those who don't believe, then take god out of the argument and explain what the people who wrote the bible, actually meant...

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, Night FM said:

I'll start with this:

Members here would prefer if you ended with this instead of littering the site with thread after thread after thread exemplifying the way god fogs rot human brains. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

One little oddity about that rape and murder business and the Judeo-Christian-Islamic faiths: the holy book is full of god-recommended rapes and murders. Someone might be tempted to criticize that.

Someone might be tempted to criticize the long bloody history of past ones, of Christians and Muslims imposing their own punitive, screwed-up morality on populations that had their own well-functioning social organization, and their campaigns to do so again with modern populations. 

Someone might be tempted to point out the immense wealth of the churches. Lilies of the field, they are not.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, iNow said:

Members here would prefer if you ended with this instead of littering the site with thread after thread after thread exemplifying the way god fogs rot human brains. 

+1

 

Chorus from the gallery 

 

Hear ! Hear !

Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 hours ago, Night FM said:

I'll start with this:

"Religion is about control or preventing people from doing things they like

Strawman much?  Am seconding @iNow request to cease starting multiple new threads every time you climb onto your atheists suck hobby horse.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

13 hours ago, Night FM said:

I'll start with this:

"Religion is about control or preventing people from doing things they like" - This is a terrible criticism since the laws of any nation or state are about "control", and this isn't necessarily a bad thing. (In fact, many modern laws developed out of older, religious sources of law). Obviously a rapist "likes" to rape his victims, and the laws against rape prevent him from doing something "he likes", but most would agree that this is a good thing, and that not everything some person somewhere may "like" to do (e.x. rape, murder, etc) should be allowed.

Shouldn’t “terrible criticisms” be wrong? Or do you have some specific definition of “terrible” that you aren’t sharing?

Please show that religion does not control people, by preventing them from doing things they like.

 

13 hours ago, Night FM said:

"Religion is about legislating morality". - This is a derivation of the above. Laws against rape and murder are "legislating morality", and this is a good thing. The issue isn't "legislating morality", only "what or whose morality" is being legislated. (e.x. most would agree that a law forcing people to attend Catholic mass wouldn't be the same as a law forcing people not to murder).

Religious rules aren’t legislated. i.e. a religious admonishment not to murder and a law punishing murder are not the same thing unless you have a theocracy

13 hours ago, Night FM said:

"Religion is about making money". - This could be said about anything, including science. Selling popular science books is in part about "making money", but that doesn't delegitimize their content, and scientific industries would have to have a way of "making money" to stay in business. Being profitable doesn't mean that something is "only" about making money, or making money at the expense of everything else.

Rationalizing a behavior is not showing that it doesn’t happen.

And once again you’ve chosen a premise with substantiating it. Where did you find these criticisms? Under what context?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, swansont said:

Shouldn’t “terrible criticisms” be wrong? Or do you have some specific definition of “terrible” that you aren’t sharing?

Please show that religion does not control people, by preventing them from doing things they like.

I'd argue the issue is what it controls and prevents people from doing, not that "it does". Given that laws do the same thing, and most sane people wouldn't say people should be able to do "everything" they might want to do to begin with (e.x. most wouldn't say a rapist should be allowed to rape simply because "he likes doing it").

3 hours ago, swansont said:

And once again you’ve chosen a premise with substantiating it. Where did you find these criticisms? Under what context?

It's a fairly popular criticism, so I don't think I need to attribute it to a specific source.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 hours ago, Night FM said:

I'd argue the issue is what it controls and prevents people from doing, not that "it does". Given that laws do the same thing, and most sane people wouldn't say people should be able to do "everything" they might want to do to begin with (e.x. most wouldn't say a rapist should be allowed to rape simply because "he likes doing it").

The existence of secular rules doesn’t mean that the religious rules don’t exist.

 

8 hours ago, Night FM said:

It's a fairly popular criticism, so I don't think I need to attribute it to a specific source.

So it should be easy to find a few examples.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.