Luke said:
...from reading the various books, do any of the authors attempt to make much of a case for (or defense of) atheism, or is it generally just the default position once you decide religion = evil?
Luke,
I dont think any of the authors equate religion with ‘evil’ - more that it is unnecessary and some of its consequences may be described as such.
And there is nothing to defend: It is up to religion to present a case that belief in a god is plausible.
Such a case has not been made.
On the contrary - the more we approach something resembling ‘knowledge’ the more implausible such a belief becomes.
I’ve always thought that taking atheism to its logical ends was its greatest weakness - everything is meaningless, and life is a lie. Either you accept the inherent meaninglessness of life and irrationally get on with life anyway, or collapse in despair, as far as I can see. Do any of the authors talk much about that?
Luke,
I wish I could offer you something more: But atheism is merely a refusal to believe in a non-existent god.
It is not an ideology (However some may choose to represent it)
But as for meaning - that is with your own good self.
Personally, I find significant meaning in this life.
Not the least of which is having had the privilege of interacting with you.
In the Christian view, by contrast, “You are the special creation of a good and all-powerful God. You are the climax of His creation. Not only is your kind unique, but you are unique among your kind. Your Creator loves you so much and so intensely desires your companionship and affection that He gave the life of His only son that you might spend eternity with him.”
Dinesh D’souza
From his article in the ‘San Francisco Chronicle’ - if that’s the argument then it’s pretty sad: Because we cannot cope with reality we have to make up a story which makes the travails of existence more palatable.
David P.,
Let me save you some trouble - you cannot refute the arguments.
At best you can accomodate to a degree… or ignore them
(or accept them - but I dont expect that).
Angela,
McGrath has degrees in physics and theology - he is a prolific writer who I came across about a decade ago when writing an essay on community.
Prior to his attack on Dawkins, he wrote ‘The Twilight of Atheism: The Rise and Fall of Disbelief in the Modern World’,which is best described as deluded wishful thinking
The irony is that the stonger the Christian response - the greater will be the atheist rebuttal
You see, you aren’t able to burn us at the stake anymore (Dont you wish you were?)
Rob