SVreX wrote:
friedgreencorrado wrote:
What if, for example, there was no truck?
Then no harm. That's not an answer to the question.
It wasn't meant to be an answer, merely a (perhaps too pithy?) remark to tempt you to consider how such behavior is viewed by someone with a very different perspective than your own.
SVreX wrote:
But you missed my point. I wasn't trying to reason anyone into the kingdom, nor modernize Pascal's wager.
I was suggesting two different understandings, only one of which can be right. Makes no difference which one.
My question was, should those with an understanding that there is imminent harm coming go out of there way to say so (whether or not they are right)? And further, should the person they are telling then be offended if he happens to disagree?
Well, it depends on the social situation!.. Personally, I no longer believe that gods exist. I won't go into the reasons why, because it's irrelevant to this particular discussion. But in order to make an attempt to explain why somebody who lives without gods might be offended, I feel I have to say this:
Unlike most atheists in Western Europe or Eastern Asia (Japan and Australia in particular), most atheists in the US at the moment are very often "ex-theists". I was actually once a Christian. To the atheist that was once a theist, atheism is not a "choice". It is a "discovery", one that is often achieved through a long and often painful process. I'm not trying to belittle the desire of a theist to "help" a fellow human being, but to many American-born atheists, such behavior is comparable to someone walking into an AA meeting and offering everyone there a nice, cold beer. I'm not saying that theists do this in any spirit of hatred or anger, I'm just trying to explain why some atheists ("full disclosure"..yes, that includes myself) get angry when a theist who means to "do good" confronts me with the same old things that actually started my doubts about my old religion in the first place. I can comprehend that a theistic individual actually wants to help me, but I have to explain that to someone who has discarded theism..their "help" is (IMO, of course) no different than the "help" of a homeless schizophrenic that wishes to push me away from the place where his family's private jet will crash.
Which brings us back to the practical reality of when theists decide to bother other people. If I'm just standing around at a party, their behavior doesn't make me angry. If I'm trying to catch a train on time, so I can get to work, their behavior does.
SVreX wrote:
The outcome is irrelevant.
Agreed, if we're talking philosophically, but I must disagree if we're talking about such behavior on the part of theists in certain social situations. Again, it's cool if I have nothing else to do (as in this thread! ), but can be a serious PITA if someone's making an "effort on his (my) behalf" by blocking the door of the post office when I need to get in there to mail my rent check to the landlord on time (true story, BTW..street preacher blocked the entrance to the place. If it had been a man my own age or younger instead of a 60yr old woman, I would have physically removed the person from the doorway).
SVreX wrote: The strangeness to me is the enormous number of people standing in the street who will simply take offense and rant at the wrongness of the people with a different understanding expressing so. This is the essence of intolerance, and the most shocking part is that the guy in the street will always be complaining how intolerant the others are, instead of respecting their view and appreciating their efforts on his behalf.
Please recall my "free beer at the AA meeting" metaphor above.
SVreX wrote:
It would be morally wrong for the observers to not speak up, because it violates their core understanding. To not speak up is to show indifference and disdain for the guy in the street. It's not an insult when someone shares their faith- it is a compliment.
Unfortunately, SVreX..I must emphatically disagree. I will concede that the individual theist wishes such behavior to be a "compliment", but I must remind folks that for those of us who no longer share their beliefs, it is no different than the behavior of the rhetorical schizophrenic I described earlier in this post. Again, the timing of the thiest's behavior is a key point. When we're all at a party together, it's often a source of discussion that we'll all enjoy.
When it's "in my way" when I'm trying to keep a roof over my head, or teach my child about real life, or trying to keep my woman happy, my level of enjoyment about a topic I consider moot is very much reduced.
SVreX wrote:
Freedom of speech is not defined by the desire of the recipient to hear the particular speech. It is defined by the speaker's desire to express it.
Agreed. No one has the "right" to not be offended. After all, it is the speech we disagree with the most that needs the most "protection".
I can only hope the theistic would-be "saviors" (if you'll forgive the pun) I've had the misfortune to meet IRL that recive my vitriolic comments about their desire to push me "out of the way" of a truck that only they can see are capable of the ability to reach a similar understanding of the issue.
Your mileage may vary.