Never pass up a chance to sit down or relieve yourself. -old Apache saying

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

atheism is natural

Everyone is born an atheist, until they start pounding religion into you as you grow up. All that pressure on parents to baptize their children, get them circumcised, take them to church, etc etc etc takes a toll. 

Religion does not automatically warp you for life, but it sure can if you let it.

I have little doubt that large areas of the ancient world were atheistic. Indeed, atheism is truly the natural state of affairs. Religion, on the other hand, is a fabricated, complicated, illogical and unnatural idea that takes effort and (un)learning.

Atheism is as natural as religion, study suggests


Atheism is as natural as religion, new research suggests, throwing doubt onto the notion humans are pre-programmed to believe in deities. 
A new study by the University of Cambridge has discovered that, contrary to popular belief, vast swathes of the ancient world did not believe in Gods.
Largely written out of the history books, many atheists in fact thrived in polytheistic societies - those that worshipped multiple deities - according to a new book. 
The claims, made in Battling the Gods by professor of Greek Culture, Tim Whitmarsh, throw doubt into the idea we are hardwired to believe in a higher power - referred to a 'religious universalism'.
Prof. Whitmarsh, a Fellow of St John's College, University of Cambridge, also counters the idea that atheism is a modern phenomenon.
He said: “These early atheists were making what seem to be universal objections about the paradoxical nature of religion – the fact that it asks you to accept things that aren’t intuitively there in your world. 
“The fact that this was happening thousands of years ago suggest that forms of disbelief can exist in all cultures, and probably always have.
“We tend to see atheism as an idea that has only recently emerged in secular Western societies.” 
He suggests that atheism was not just common in ancient Greek or Roman societies, but rather it flourished more back then than it does now.  
The "Age of Atheism" only he ended, he suggests, when the generally tolerant societies were replaced by imperial forces that demanded the acceptance of one true God. 
He added: “The idea of a priest telling you what to do was alien to the Greek world.”
Using around a thousand years’ worth of writings to prove his theory, some texts he cites date back to c.570 BC – pre Plato. 
But he concludes it neither proves nor disproves the truth of atheism itself. 

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