Atheists & Agnostics
Related: About this forum'Difficult to be unbeliever in religious India': From an atheist
Sachi Mohanty, Hindustan Times | Updated: May 03, 2015 18:39 IST
It is difficult to be an unbeliever in a religious society. Atheist Sachi Mohanty ruminates on the need to question conservatism and debunk religion. (Illustration: Ravi Jadhav)
The Nepal earthquake tells us that we live on an ever-changing, geologically-active planet. Fossil evidence tells us about our long history of evolution and of the kinship we share with all life on the planet.
After learning about evolution, plate tectonics and astronomy - this week, the Hubble Space Telescope, which has travelled 6,115,507,200 km, completed 25 years of orbiting the earth - and learning about our place in the universe, how can any educated person still believe in the gods of man-made religions? The religion and its gods and myths that I grew up with started appearing to me to be silly before I finished high school. Once you acquire some basic science education, religious explanations look positively primitive.
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For now, it seems like the majority of Indians are destined to spend their lives singing songs in praise of various gods. I'm happy to be in the tiny minority of those who call themselves atheists. It doesn't bother me that I am in disagreement with about 200 family relations. Einstein, Feynman, Hawking and Weinberg are some of the physicists who share my lack of belief while most prisoners in America believe in god.
Needless to add, the figure is probably even higher in Indian prisons.
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Helen Borg
(3,963 posts)Warren Stupidity
(48,181 posts)Helen Borg
(3,963 posts)beam me up scottie
(57,349 posts)but I really doubt only 60% of Americans are religious.
The last study I remember seeing showed the number was over 80%.
truebrit71
(20,805 posts).... could be both I guess.... but I definitely remember being dismayed that such a large number of people were that fucking stupid....
RussBLib
(9,666 posts)And so the GOP's resistance to any and all things science makes sense. They desperately desire to keep people in the dark ages and fearful of the unknown.
And so we see our nation having a bit of a religious resurgence, while we see our education system deteriorating and failing many kids. The two things are connected.
I can only imagine the internal struggles that freethinkers in countries like India face. If not for the internet, we would probably never know of them, nor would they know that millions of others out there are of like mind.
beam me up scottie
(57,349 posts)Seriously, I can't imagine how awesome it must be to finally be able to interact with other atheists after being suffocated so long.
Like coming up for air.
mountain grammy
(27,273 posts)beam me up scottie
(57,349 posts)If Wikipedia had been available, and Google...jeez, just imagine it, mountain grammy.
mountain grammy
(27,273 posts)A generation of superheroes. Well maybe. Hell we were using slide rulers in trig when I was a teen.
Lordquinton
(7,886 posts)Just think, all the kids today who would have been reading encyclopedias in your day are now on the internet soaking up all the information they can find. A generation of superheroes indeed