In terms of practical consequences, when judging a philosophy the two most meaningful questions are: âis a given philosophy more or less likely to be consistent with the commission of a grave evil?â and âis a philosophy more or less likely to promote the common good?â The answer to the first question is critically important, because if a philosophy is consistent with the commission of a grave evil, then that philosophy is self-evidently bad (practically). If honest, even AntiTheist would have to agree, as he or she believes that theism is wrong and results in âbad thingsâ. The answer to the second question is an indicator of how closely a given philosopy conforms to the Truth.
I donât agree that things that are
consistent with bad things are themselves bad. [my wearing a blue shirt is consistent with me doing bad things like punching a random stranger in the faceâŚit doesnât
prevent me from doing itâŚbut that doesnât make wearing a blue shirt bad]. However, I do think that things that directly
lead to bad things are bad. [If, for example, I held the belief that âpunching random people is good,â then that belief â which presumably would lead to action â I would consider bad]
And furthermore, I donât think that the practical consequences of any particular belief or non-belief have anything to do with
truth value
Any evil deed commited by a Catholic is inconsistent with Catholicism itself.
I disagree, on the grounds that you and I likely define âevilâ very differently. But letâs put that aside for a moment â because it will sidetrack us â to get to something more interesting:
In contrast, atheism, does not preach anything other than either 1) lack of belief or 2) disbelief. Atheism, in either form, by itself, stands for nothing. An atheist may believe whatever he or she wants, and different atheists can have radically different moral conclusions regarding actions.
Iâm stunned. Youâve actually said something correct. Congratulations.
However, nothing stops an atheist from taking a more sinister road. For example, nothing about atheism prevents Stalin (an atheist) from stating that his murderous pogroms were good.
Nor would we expect atheism to do so. As you yourself have said, atheism is either a lack of belief or a disbelief. Itâs clearly not a system of morality.
Logically, to criticize something thatâs not a system of morality on the grounds that itâs not a system of morality is absurd. It would be like criticizing my philosophy of wearing blue shirts on the grounds that nothing about it prevents me from calling murder âgood.â Or it would be like criticizing my non-belief in Thor on the grounds that nothing about it prevents me from calling murder âgood.â
While Leela and other atheists may naturally recoil from such a statement and provide various reasons why Stalinâs pogroms were NOT good (maybe even Evil), nothing about atheism as a philosophy itself contradicts Stalinâs position. Atheism is consistent with Stalinâs actions and his beliefs regarding the rightness of his actions.
I donât ârecoilâ from such a statement. Itâs a fact: absolutely nothing about atheism prevents a person from choosing to do something bad, just like absolutely nothing about blue-shirt-ism prevents a person from choosing to do something bad. So what does that prove?
However, atheism is consistent with Stalin or any other evil.
Or any good. Similarly, my blue shirt philosophy is consistent with any action, good or evil.
While an atheist may properly deny that atheism leads to or compels evil, it is undeniable that evil is consistent with atheism.
Itâs equally undeniable that evil is consistent with my blue shirt philosophy.
If so, then atheism is a philosophy to be rejected as bad for both the individual and society.
Unless youâre willing to claim that we should reject my blue shirt philosophy â and any other position that is not a system of morality â you should see whatâs wrong with this statement.
Now, interestingly enough, my screen name is AntiTheist because I
do believe that god-beliefs (and more generally, supernatural beliefs) lead towards things that I would label âbad.â And when I say âlead,â I donât mean, âthereâs nothing in the philosophy that prevents it from happening!â I mean that bad things are a direct consequence of belief.
Of course, that argument is going to lead us very far astray, and, as Iâve said, whether a belief leads to good actions or bad actions is irrelevant to the more important point: whether or not itâs true.
EDIT: It strikes me, upon re-reading your post, that you seem to think that atheism is a âphilosophy.â Itâs not. You yourself point out that atheism is
only a lack of belief or a disbelief in something. Your whole argument is predicated around the fact that atheism is
nothing more than this, but you simultaneously want to claim that it is a âphilosophyâ so that you can criticize it for not being a system of morals. Itâs all very bizarre.
I mean, I also donât believe in fire-breathing zebras. Iâm an a-fire-breathing-zebra-ist. And my a-fire-breathing-zebraism is completely and totally consistent with all sorts of actions, good and evil. Itâs consistent with the most atrocious and horrendous crimes. It does absolutely nothing to stop me from doing bad things.
Does this mean I should abandon my âphilosophyâ of a-fire-breathing-zebraism and finally accept that some zebras can breathe fire?
Obviously, itâs not a philosophy, and obviously itâs not a system of morals â so criticizing it on the basis that itâs neither of those things is more than ridiculous.