Okay, you guys are up way earlier than me. Time zones and too much swamping around during the nights, I might like to claim as excuses. But thus, a lot piled up, so let me go through it, not necessarily in chronological or alphabetical order though:
Lydiot wrote:
JWocky thinks I'm an idiot for having a certain view on a certain issue, a view on its morality, I'm certainly not going to criticize him for thinking he has the moral "high ground" or that he claims "high morality". That is in and by itself fine by me. I think it's more interesting to find out just what his feelings are and what his though process is which makes him have the view he has.
I admittedly think, some of your opinions are wrong. But if you paid close attention, I never argued purely out of any "moral high ground" but I argued from different priorities. We had this clash about terrorism and profiling, if you remember. I had my priority on the lives of victims and potential victims in the future, you had yours on some abstract idea of racism and to be honest a lot of misunderstandings about what profilers do and how you can use profiles and how not.
So I never claimed "high morality". I claimed,. in areas in which I have some expertise "high knowledge". Biiiig difference. In my opinion, a lot of things aren't even a question of "moral" or "ethics" but simply logic. But then, admittedly, some critics accused me already in the past to be too emotionally constipated to know the difference between doing right things because they are right or because they are the logical thing to do. So ... well, bottom line, while I admittedly think, some of your opinions are in the way of logical solutions and therefore could be labeled "idiotic", I don't think, you are an idiot.
Atheism and AtheistsWell, not every Atheist is the same. They come in all colors, sizes and alas all levels of fanatism. Some say "I am an Atheist" and when I say "okay, I am not", they just shrig and we can have a beer together. Others on the other hand explode, tell me the story of the flying green spaghetti monster, try to give me a history lesson about the Crusades and to avoid touching Napoleon's Religion of Reason or the Communist Atheism. Usually garn9ished with logical blows like "I prove God doesn't exsit" by "If God exists, he shall strike me with lighting", followed by a ten second break and then the claim "I wasn't struck by lighting, see, God doesn't exist". That's really the logic that gives me a headache, Speaking to that kind of Atheists is like ten episodes of "Three and half man" in a row ...
Now, Atheists have no scripture ... that is actually not entirely true. A lot of Atheist philosophers and thinkers have written a lot, so there is at least a non-canonized body of Atheist scripture and because it is all based on the same tenements of "non-fath", it is quite coherent and most Atheists subscribe to it either by knowing this body of scripture or by simply adhering to what others told them without realizing that this is something, that was, x hundred versions before they heard it, based on this kind of scripture. For an Atheist, Feuerbach for example, has a sacrosanct meaning.
So, the only difference between an Atheist and a Christian or a Muslim in this aspect is, the Christian or the Muslim know usually the title of the book.
The second misconception is that Atheism is not a religion. Religion is belief in an unprovable concept. Atheists can't prove the non-existence of higher beings per se the same as for example Christians can't prove the existence of God or Muslim can't prove the existence of Allah. Actually, Christians could at least deliver some evidence for the historical existence of Jesus and there is a lot of historical evidence for the existence of Mohammed, so, the religious people are in terms of evidence a lot nearer to prove anything which leads to the funny situation that the Atheist needs more faith in his concept than for example a Christian because he has to overcome the absolute of any evidence and forge his own.
In other aspects, Atheism has actually a lot of the hallmarks of early forms of other organized religions. Cellular organization attempts, the tendency to mission others by making the unproven claim to be the only ones who offer a real concept (every religion basically claims to be the only right one, Atheism is no exception from that rule), a spectrum of followers from moderate deep into the fanatic realm with sometimes even violent tendencies against followers of any other religion.
So, in many aspects, Atheism is nothing but just another religion from what I see in the symptoms. But since some ideologies also have a tendency to take on religion like symptoms and since some of them even tend to ally with religions in some parts of the spectrum, it would lead now too far to go in all the details. Especially since I am honestly not what you would consider Christian 101. The one thing that never fails to upset me in religious discussion is, that many faithful (including very faithful Atheists) obviously never read the books they talk about ...
So,, bottom line on this subject: I don't subscribe to judgement on other people's beliefs as long as they don't go and think they have to kill or maim people for their faith. I believe in what I believe in, you believe in what you believe in, don't go and claim your belief is better than mine because I will come back and ask you for evidence and then ... how stupid would you look if you can't bring it?
Atheism and law historyIn longer terms of history, Atheism is absolutely irrelevant. Atheism is a relatively new religion, it didn't exsit in Hammurabi's times. You can't judge the actions of persons in history by using things, that didn't exist back then. Things happened always in the social, cultural and yes, also religious context of the time. When for example the Babylonian Talmus was written, it was still 600 years till a guy even later know as Jesus walked through the landscape. Or 1100 till Mohammed wrote the Quaran and roughly 3500 years till Feuerbach would write "Religion is opium for the people". Nothing of it had happened when Hammurabi lived, so he obviously couldn't refer to it.
This means, his religious reference at the beginning of his law codex is formalized by the religious beliefs of his time. Whether he personally believed in it or not, he had to do it, it was his legitimization and as thus, not only religion but also the law of his time. We can see similar mechanisms of legitimization for centuries, even millennia. That people usually don't think about the meaning of such words doesn't erase the words. People just think about them ... here is a part of the proclamation of Queen Elizabeth II in February 1952 as Queen ...
We, therefore, Sir William John McKell, The Governor-General and Commander-in-Chief in and over the Commonwealth of Australia and members of the Federal Executive Council do now hereby, with one voice and consent of tongue and heart, publish and proclaim that the High and Mighty Princess Elizabeth Alexandra Mary is now, by the death of our late Sovereign of happy memory, become Queen Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God, Queen of this realm and of all her other Realms and Territories, Head of the Commonwealth, Defender of the Faith, Supreme Liege Lady in and over the Commonwealth of Australia, to whom her lieges do acknowledge all faith and constant obedience, with hearty and humble affection: Beseeching God, by whom Kings and Queens do reign, to bless the Royal Princess Elizabeth the Second with long and happy years to reign over us.
Also Queen Elizabeth's legitimization is not merely based on blood line but on the fact, that God called on her blood line to rule, which in case of English Kings is pretty simple since Henry VIII because they are also "Defenders of the Faith" by title, means, they can confirm themselves as God's mouth pieces and don't need for example the pope.
So, while it looks all religious, it has also legal implications and had for thousands of years when it came to rulers of royalty (opposite to rulers by election). Which means, rulers are, when making laws, bound to the context of their legitimization. A king to the Gods of his land, a president to the beliefs of his constituents. Which consequently imposes some kind of "second-hand decency" on them.