Superman wrote:And ter, you fucking lied. Your study doesn't say that 83% of psychiatrists say that they're religious or whatever. It says this:
Moreover, while 10 percent of all doctors reported having no religious affiliation, 17 percent of psychiatrists listed their religion as "none." Psychiatrists were more likely to consider themselves spiritual but not religious (33 percent) compared to other doctors (19 percent).
"Religious patients who prefer to see like-minded psychiatrists may have difficulty finding a match because their religious group is under-represented among psychiatrists," stated the researchers in the study.
Psychiatrists were less likely to attend services frequently, believe in God or the afterlife, or cope by looking to God "for strength, support and guidance," according to the survey.
I've worked with more than a few psychiatrists, and I have yet to meet ONE who is a Christian, and all but a few are atheists.
Hm, it says 17 percent listed their religion as "none". 100% minus 18 percent atheist = 83% non-atheist. Where's the lie, again?
Pint0 Xtreme wrote:Terralthra wrote:
Terralthra, do you believe that there is a Chinese tea cup orbiting the sun right now?
No, I do not. I also do not believe in God. However, as I previously noted, if someone does believe there is a Chinese tea cup orbiting the sun right now, and that has no harmful effects on either themselves or others, then I don't see the problem.
Red herring. Whether a belief is harmful or not has nothing to do with whether it is rational or not. Do you think that the idea that there is a Chinese tea cup orbiting the sun is a rational belief?
It's not outside the realm of possibility, but it's fairly unlikely, so I'd say no. Given that a chinese tea cup by definition comes from China, and there are no known examples of a tea cup being brought into space from Earth and then released in such a way as to put it into Solar orbit, it's fairly irrational to believe that one was.
Just as an aside, this entire question is a red herring. We're not talking about tea cups orbiting the sun, we're talking about one person's belief that an omnipotent being caused the universe to come into being.
Zixinus wrote:Being delusional is not harmful? Because last I checked, being delusional or holding a delusional belief can crippled proper judgement, thus possibly harming others and themselves.
I'm having trouble imagining a psychiatrist diagnosing a belief in God, especially such an abstract belief as "God started the universe umpteen billion years ago," as delusional. Perhaps you can point me to some psychiatrists who have done so?
General Zod wrote:
If there's no evidence that it's real then why treat it as anything more than imaginary? Frankly God has about as much evidence for existing as Mickey Mouse or Leprechauns.
Less, actually, in the case of Mickey Mouse.
General Zod wrote:
Claiming something is false is not declaring a positive dumbass. Feel free to cherry pick more though.
Now I know you're still in high school. "Declaring positively" means to state something "with certainty; absolutely: The statement is positively true."
link That's not the same as "declaring a positive." Such idiotic quibbling over definitions is typical of a losing debator.
General Zod wrote:
The problem is when you start adding superfluous terms to scientific theories and wind up with a bunch of convoluted crap that makes them not so useful. "A + A = X" is a useful statement. "A + A = X, therefore Y did it" is not so useful. It doesn't follow at all. I suggest reading up on this thing called Occam's Razor sometime.
"And then you start sliding down this slippery strawman slope!" Ryan Thunder posited no such thing, and made no such statements. He simply said he personally said God caused the universe to be created, and implied that God had no hand in it thereafter.