Ok, I'm done with the line-by-line business...Old Man G Funk said:Sorry about that, but I wanted to make sure you knew what I was referring to.
What Ohio said, plus we can certainly separate out factors, like the teaching of hatred that are parts of the religion.
It's a tool that is used on the masses, yes. For the masses, it is a reason. There are other tools that are possible and can be just as irrational, but that's no argument to night fight against one that is known to be irrational.
Actually, I can. The commandment is not to murder. Killing for punishment is dealing out god's justice.
Teaching a bastardized form of Christianity does end up making it better in the end, because of our seculaly (and rationally) evolving society. It is done IN SPITE OF religion. The original objection, however, was to the idea that people need a guidebook, and if one were to simply read the Bible and not believe the perverted message that the church now gives, then the guidebook would be teaching people to commit all kinds of heinous things in the name of god.
The percentage of people that do believe in god, maybe. (If you add up the percentages, you actually get less than 50% I believe. 22% chose Creationism and 17% chose ID, correct? Added up that comes to 39%.) Those percentages aside, do you think that over 50% of people NEED the Bible (or some other irrational religious text) in order to keep from running around and killing for no reason? That was the original statement that I objected to.
I'm not exactly sure how. I thought that I had made a point that I was speaking about the religions that we have, which I do think are a bigger force for evil than for good. In the abstract, that statement would not necessarily be true.
Because we rationally note that it is beneficial to society, which in turn helps us personally. We don't need the threat of hell in order to understand the concept of societal benefit.
You cannot separate the influence of religion upon culture it's impossible. If you can extract the influence of religion on English culture you will convince me, until then you're just issuing hot-air.
I also said 50% of people are unable to be rational, I did not refer to the Bible.
The commandment is thou shalt not kill (in the English version) you can go back to Greek/Hebrew/Double-fvcking-Dutch for all I care but as no sane English person reads the bible in those languages it is irrelevant, it says thou shalt not kill, that's what the church teaches. Give it up. I was taught from the bible and there's plenty of teaching, particularly in the NT that is clearly not evil.
I fail to see any real evidence that proves religion is inherently evil, but for the sake of ending this pointless argument I will accept that it is.
Now I want to see that rationality is inherently good; 'for the good of society' just doesn't cut it. You remove religion you leave man, the creator of religion, you think he's suddenly going to get nicer?