And if we hadn't accepted the religiously motivated (amongst others) idea that gay marriage shouldn't be permitted?
Some people, including those outside of religion continue to refuse that gay marriage is permitted on the grounds that marriage can't be between two or more people of the same gender. The idea that this is 'religiously motivated' seems to ignore the fact that, as we are constantly told, the concept of sexual orientation didn't exist at the time that the Scriptures of the main world religions were written.
If we hadn't accepted the right die shouldn't be permitted?
Has British society accepted it?
Some of these religious ideas have profound negative effects on actual people's actual lives. We don't just 'accept it and move on', we research, we learn, we construct arguments and we argue back, we campaign and, increasingly, we win.
It seems to be the 'argumentuum ad populum' that is winning at present, even though there is a general agreement that it doesn't necessarily mean that it is correct, so 'winning' might not be the rifght term.
Not really. I don't need to read every study on leprechauns to know that they aren't real. I don't need to exhaustively research treatises on the contents of the pot at the end of the rainbow to know that it's not a pot of gold.
You can't dismiss any idea out of hand, but if you read the widely regarded commentaries and there's still nothing logically valid in any of it, it it's all based on circular arguments, question begging and developing ideas from baseless assertions then you can stop researching and just wait for someone to proffer something new.
Sums up my opinion on the belief in science that some here seem to profess.