Gabriella,
Don't worry - your assertions about religion aren't particularly well-thought out or supported by evidence. I could have waited longer. Evasions noted.
The irony of that will be lost on you, but the basic principle is simple and sound enough I'd have thought – if you can be persuaded that nonsense is inerrantly true (indeed expected of you by a God who will reward you accordingly) then the brakes of ordinary decency will be removed in your pursuit of it. That’s not to say that there aren’t religious people who don’t reach accommodations with the more egregious parts of their faith beliefs, but it is to say that certainty and acting accordingly are inextricably bound up.
Voltaire's and Russell's above assertions are meaningless noise in relation to our discussion about the majority of law-abiding religious people i.e the ones who don't commit atrocities and who have not been made to believe anything - whether it is beliefs about the identity they want to claim or moral, political or religious beliefs.
You’ve missed it again. As RD notes, it’s not that extreme versions of religious faith are the problem but rather religious faith itself is the problem. Once you let down the drawbridge by privileging faith beliefs over guessing, how would you propose to police what comes over the moat?
Also…
You can’t have an “also” without a prior.
…you will find that many people think and then decide that dying for a purpose or cause is a rational decision.
Yes I do know that many people
think that. The 9/11 bombers – pious men all – thought they were acting perfectly rationally.
How does that help you?
Or it may just be that dying is preferable to living in numerous cases, since many people favour quality of life over just living.
Yes it may be, but that’s only their life they’re taking and not the lives of others, and what’s that got to do with religious belief in any case?
Happy to engage with you by the way, but for practical purposes I’d appreciate it if we could stick to the points under discussion. Thanks.