I simply saying there is no reason or evidence to hold that the Bible is any more special than any other piece of literature. But if the Bible is regarded as emanating from some divine source this is exactly what we must do. Imagine if we had major disagreements/violence other interpretations of the works Shakespeare! It would be absurd.
It ought not to be with divine holy books when you believe the author/revelation of its words is God himself.
Nowhere in the Bible does God say “you don’t have to take me literally” or “feel free to interpret my words” or “take me literally now, but in 2,000 years, please start interpreting.” Clearly God wants us to kill homosexuals and those working on the Sabbath, and women who are not virgins on their wedding night….
If you believe in God, and that he is perfect, omnipotent, omniscient etc and that the Bible contains his words, then the logical ramification of this is you must accept his words. To interpret his words implies you think he is wrong/mistaken - hence the required amendment - which is a contradiction.
Clearly interpretation/cherry picking is most defiantly the smarter thing to do. We must ignore all the absurdities and danger in the text. But this cannot be done without contradicting the notion that this book is somehow ‘special’ - the word of God. You simply cannot hold that the Bible is God’s will/word, but also open to human interpretation/desire. i.e. I don’t agree with this part, so I’ll ignore God here!
Incidentally we just started covering ‘Orientalism’ at Uni. Weird.
Of course I don’t allow this with religious texts. If someone said they think God played no part in the Bible, interpret it as your like. The inconsistency is in hold these words to be divine but at the same time open to human interpretation.
There is no reason to respect irrationality at all. He is against moderates but he does not hold them to be worse people than extremists. He does hold their beliefs to be both equally irrational (which they are), but the fundamentalists willingness to act of this beliefs makes them far far more dangerous.
He is simply applying the same standard of conversation that we all apply to any other discourse in our life! He is against the notion that religious belief must be respected simply because they are religious belief. And I completely agree with that.
Answer this: If someone doesn’t present valid reason/evidence for their beliefs, why should we respect or believe them?
The root of our disagreement is your belief that God words are on equal standing to those of his creation. In which case, why worship the Bible over any other book? Why not worship the Lord of the Rings and draw ones morality and beliefs about reality from there? Clearly and obviously the Bible (and Koran) is considered by believers to be above / transcending any other piece of writing available. This makes them a slave to its content.
As long as people accept the Bible or Koran as being divine they will continue to hold its content to be special. Then you will continue to get people to act of its content.
Please elaborate.
Yes…. but unfortunately believers of the religions do not hold that the Bible is no longer divine because of this. (I don’t know how mistranslated, if at all, it has been) And as long as they still consider the divinity of the Bible, the longer the perception that its content is divine will get passed on. That is the issues I’m arguing. I don’t believe in God so obviously don’t believe the Bible is divine in any way. But people do, and that is a problem.
Feel free to interpret Harris as you please. I agree with his main argument that we ought to be able to criticize irrational religious beliefs and that it shouldn’t be taboo to do this. But I’ve not read his book yet and would prefer to before I join you in criticising any of his arguments you disagree with.