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Eric0802
Guest
Antitheist, I think the problem here is a confusion of different tokens of the type ‘atheism.’Atheism, not being a belief, cannot directly “produce” action. Action is the fruit of things you do believe, not things you don’t believe.
For example, you can’t logically get from “There are no gods” to “I should destroy all followers of all religions.” There’s no way to do it. You have to start from a belief like, “All religious people are bad.” Then, starting from that belief, you can deduce the conclusion, like this: “All religious people are bad; I should destroy all bad people; I should destroy all followers of all religions.”
Take, for example, the atheism of a feral child and the atheism of J.L. Mackie. Both lack belief in god, but not in the same way. The feral child lacks belief primarily because he lacks the conceptual equipment to formulate such a belief, while Mackie lacks belief because he thinks belief is irrational. That is, whenever we speak about S’s atheism, we can never speak about it in isolation from the explanation (not just the reasons!) of his atheism.
So, I think it’s uncontroversially true that we cannot logically move from the atheism of a feral child to “destroy all followers of religion.” However, we can move from “atheism is rational while theism isn’t” to “destroy all followers of religion” without much difficulty with the addition of (1) premises that while not strictly entailed by the rationality of atheism and irrationality of theism, are either implied or presupposed by it, such as “rationality is preferable to irrationality” and “people should be rational” (an example of a premise presupposed by the Mackie type of atheism), or “atheists of the Mackie type are rational, while theists are irrational” (which is implied by Mackie atheism), and (2) from premises (usually concomitants of (1)) concerning the dangers of irrationality and the difficulty of persuading irrational people by means of rational arguments.
Now I’m not saying this is the ineluctable result of what I’ve called Mackie atheism here (as Mackie’s life demonstrated); rather, I’m only saying that it’s not the case that there’s no logical move whatsoever from atheism to violence when we consider atheism as something more than the absence of belief exemplified by the feral child, since it almost always involves something more than such an absence of belief in modern atheists.