I was supposed to be much further along tonight, but I made the mistake of deciding to go back and bung in the list of famous atheists, with little thumbnail bios. Sounds simple, right?
No.
Not when you have to sort through some rather extensive lists, which you whittle down by well-known names, further contemplating whether that name is well-known because Christians already know and despise that atheist, and then trying to phrase the bio so that you're not plagiarizing Wikipedia... I should've given it a miss and waited to add it in the revision stage.
Heh heh heh whoops.
And I'm not even close to done with it. Ah, well.
I spent the last bit of the night revising Rule #9. I didn't hit on the Constitutional question - I might do that elsewhere in the book, but it really doesn't belong here - but I did find your suggestions useful, and I hope this works:
9. Absolutely under any circumstances never ever bring up that old "atheism is a religion too" chestnut. Atheism is a philosophical stance, a way of thinking about the world that is profoundly irreligious, or simply a lack of belief in anything supernatural. In the immortal words of my friend Howard, "Atheism is a religion the way bald is a hair color." Atheism is different from religion in many ways, but perhaps the most important is this: if empirical proof of God were presented to us and verified by science, we'd become immediate theists, just as you would become a "unicornist" if unicorns were discovered living in some remote forest. You may find it impossible to comprehend a life without religion and thus think of atheism as a religion, but your thinking it doesn't make it so, no more than if I were to call your Christianity a form of atheism because I can't comprehend a life with religion. Besides, people who say things like "atheism is a religion, too" are just trying to discredit atheists, and showing that they have no good argument in the process. You don't want to look ridiculous, so don't make that mistake.
I can already think of a few minor changes to words that would make that clearer, but damn it, I'm tired.
As for the famous atheists, I have a lot of names, including of all people Allan Pinkerton of Pinkerton Agency fame. Whod'a thunkit? I'm thinking of sticking Ron Reagan in there just to twist a few conservative noses. The fact that the son of their hero is a ballet dancer and a liberal has got to kill them - the fact that he's an atheist, too, is just the insult to injury.
Yes, I'm an evil atheist. Why do you ask?
I'm also a very tired atheist. And I have got nearly 7,000 words to go. Argh.
If anyone has a good argument as to why theology isn't philosophy, and knows of groups where atheists and Christians are working together in harmony to stop fuckwits from destroying the world, now is the time to say so. I could surely use your help.
3 comments:
atheists and Christians working together:
* Americans United for Separation of Church and State: "its current executive director, Barry W. Lynn, is an ordained minister in the United Church of Christ" - Wikipedia
* Talk2Action: "What if people of any religious or nonreligious orientation who share a concern about the rise of the dominionist movement in the Unites States were equally welcome, and their perspectives were respected and taken into account as strategy discussions took place?"
Difference between theology and philosophy: Theology assumes the existence of god and other supernatural entities, while philosophy treats all existence as more or less hypothetical.
One could probably come up with some helpful analogies...
* Theology is like philosophy the way a think-tank is like a news agency. (They both consider the same subjects, but one of them often has an agenda behind their conclusions.)
* Theology is like philosophy the way astrology is like astronomy. (They both have some subject matter in common... sort of.)
* Theology is like philosophy the way Fox News is fair and balanced. (The one only seems like the other if you assume certain things are true regardless of evidence.)
Hope that's useful... (50 kilowords to victory -- Yes You Can!)
Not exactly a deliberate collaboration of atheists and theists, but some evangelicals are starting to think of the Earth as something they should work to preserve.
Philosophy is thinking about existence and how we know it; theology is revelation about existence and you'd better not question it. A big problem if the revelation in question is made-up.
As for atheists working with Christians, myself I'm the more crotchety contentious type. But maybe you should contact John Loftus. He's an ex-christian atheist who seems very good at talking with Christians in a way that's both civil, and approaches things in a way that's designed specifically not to turn them off.
As an example of the kind of things he does, he recently attended a Christian apologetics confernce. He's not really interested in "preaching to the (atheist) choir", and so tries very hard to be appealing to the Christians who might be doubters out there.
He has very recently written a book, so in that sense, he is your competition, but he seems like a good guy, and I'd bet he'd be glad to talk to you.
Reggie, the Infidel Guy inteviewed him recently. John Loftus's writing can seem a bit stuffy sometimes, but if you listen to the interview with Reggie, then you kind of get the idea of the tone that the writing's meant to be taken with.
Anyway, something to occupy the time, if nothing else:
Reggie's interview of John W. Loftus
John W. Loftus's blog
Well, the guy's been around the net for quite awhile, so probably I'm not telling you anything you don't already know.
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