nathana said:
You are talking about believing in a RELIGION restricting freedom (depending on circumstances, I agree with this). However, that is very different than saying belief in god restricts freedom. The statement "I believe in god" restricts no freedoms; it does not suggest any rules or what have you. Now, saying "I follow Christianity".... okay, here I can see your point. Regardless, this is an important distinction. God is not necessarily the same thing as religion, at all.
hannaugh said "I don't think there is
anything about believing in a higher power..." Religion is a frequent aspect of believing in a higher power. Religion restricts freedom. Yes, you are correct; simply believing in a god does not restrict freedom. However, she said that in response to my statement about closet atheists being granted freedom for shedding their hollow religion, so I feel I wasn't being unjustifiably nitpicky. We were talking about religion in specific, not any sort of deism.
If someone made that same statement in a different context, and for whatever reason I felt compelled to challenge them, I would have certainly worded my argument differently. But in the context of this conversation, I feel my statement was not out of place.
nathana said:
Also a huge value judgment. I dare you to prove this.
In Ethiopia, approximately 2.5 million children are starving
right now. Which is more likely to rectify that, GMOs and/or drought-resistant crops, or prayer for more rain? I should mention that without receiving aid, 4 million Ethiopians would starve every year, whether they had a good farming season or not.
In early 20th century America, the infant mortality rate was 136 in every 1000. Today, it hovers somewhere around
seven per thousand. Was this caused by an increase in the power of religion over the past century, or a result in advances of medical science?
Of course, both my arguments above have one serious flaw - they both assume that life is valuable. If you would like to argue that the metaphysical benefits of religion outweigh the tangible benefits of science, then I would need to see some evidence (not even proof - just evidence!) that any such supernatural benefits exist at all.
As for the spiritual health aspect that many theists tout, it's important to keep in mind that religion and spirituality are not one in the same. Religion is only a conduit to spiritual health - not the definitive path.