Changing the name could not have been critical to his overall intent. Poor defence.
Again, it doesn't need defending, it stands on its own merits, and holds up well.
But you have nothing which prevents you from straw manning the Gospel
Which interpretation of the Gospel have I given which isn't actually held by someone, somewhere?
What does that mean.
Exactly what it says - we don't have some overarcing text that defines any sort of unified belief system to which we must adhere.
In this day and age the bible doesn't have to be followed by anyone.
And yet elements of it, and other holy books, are written into law - and held as cultural expectations - all over the world without any rational justification.
So what do you mean?Give an example.
This board is full of them. You keep referring to Professor Dawkins as though that's an argument, rather that actually addressing any of the points that he, and others, make.
Only God can forgive sin.
Assert that the imaginary figure can forgive the imaginary stain... what was it about turtles all the way down?
But more importantly how can a con be a bad thing, if there is no crime.
No crime? Moral or legislative? Misogyny, homophobia, institutional cover-ups of abuse...
So far you have a con is wrong, is a crime and therefore a sin, sin is apparently made up and so a con cannot be a crime and yet you are the authority which wants power over it's identification and condemnation.
No, so far we have a con - a con without any significant ill-effect is practical joke, but this is a bit more than whoppee cushion. Whether a crime is a sin or not is a meaningless contention - sin isn't a thing. Whether something is a crime is only partially linked to whether any given community thinks the con is morally wrong or not.
Things only have power as long as you let 'em.
No, things have power so long as other people are electing the officials that will enforce those things, or people are selling guns to those who will enforce those things.
What we say is that wrong doing is what exerts it's authority.
What?
O.