tzor wrote:Compared to other forums they seem to be about the average. Arrogant, rude and unreasonable, prone to whip out insults and expouse an elitist attitude towards their own preceived superior position.
The irony is that it is not my religious side that gets annoyed (the secular Franciscan in me jumps for joy at the sight of "true joy") but the scientific side in me that boils with rage. This is because at the heart of their argument is a scientific fallacy that was strongly proposed in the 19th century and most scientists laugh at today; the notion that we can understand everything there is to know about the universe. It was often coupled with the notion that we have already invented everything that is important in the universe.
The irony is even more profound when you realize they are not really athiests in the first place. Their "god" is what they preceive (falsely) science to be, just as the mob of the French Revolution raised "reason" as their goddess. To that extent they are as damgerous as any religious fundie out there, and as about as impossible to reason with as well.
I'd rather talk to an agnostic.

This is a bit of a blanket approach to atheism. Its another convenient generalisation (which admittedly atheists are fond of when discussing believers) allowing you to quickly discount all atheists because they only believe science without really acknowledging that to not believe in something is not the same as to believe in something else. I don't believe in a God, but I certainly don't believe science has all the answers and you'll have never heard me argue there is a scientific reason not to believe in a God, because there isn't. There may not be a scientific reason to believe in God either but just because that is the case doesn't mean that all atheists are driven by that.
Its popular round here to talk about scientism in the sense that science is the athiests religion but that simply isn't the case. Science is just one of the myriad of tools we have to help understand our universe, some people are as equally deluded by science as by any religion but to say all athiests 'worship' science is like saying all religious people regardless of denomination worship Jesus.
Personally I think Thomas Paine alluded to the spirit of atheism most succintly for me way back in the eighteenth century when he said, "The world is my country, my religion is to do good" (which if I could be bothered I'd expand into a response to Widowmakers well rehearsed, certainly tired and frankly quite offensive suggestions that morality is the sole province of the pious but its been done before here, by me even, and I can't be bothered). In a more modern day sense my atheism is far more aligned to organisation such as the Humanist Society and Secular Organisation than any single minded pursuit of objective scientific reason. In the words of Bertrand Russell - "Remember your humanity and forget the rest".
EDIT: Oh and before anybody sees fit to mention it, yes, I know Thomas Paine wasn't an Atheist and was even the son of a quaker. So what, it doesn't stop him from neatly sound-biting it.