The simple answer is "NO."
By Sam Warren
Actually, I believe
that atheist are more moral that theist. We don't have to fear a non-exhisting
god to be moral. We are moral because it is the best way to believe. At
lest we don't kill anyone for their beliefs.
We also don't burn people at the stake
or shove them into an oven. “Good people do good things. Bad people
do bad things. But you have to be religious for good people to do bad
things.” Our prisons are full of religious criminals.
Atheist were not responsible for the Crusades,
Dark Ages, the Inquisition, wich burnings, pogroms, religious wars, assinations
of abortionist, and terrorism.
Hitler had a Catholic upbringing and used
religion to justify some of his actions. Stalin went to a seminary plus
Stalinism was a form of secular religion where facts were ignored if they
didn't fit their beliefs.
The claim that there are no atheist in foxholes
is a total lie. I was in the military and know of many atheists who fought
for their country.
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Is Belief in God Essential
for Moral Virtue?
By Paul Kurtz,
for the Washington Post
A growing sector
of world civilization is secular; that is, it emphasizes worldly rather
than religious values. This is especially true of Europe, which is widely
considered post-religious and post-Christian (with a small Islamic minority).
Secularist winds are also blowing strong in Asia, notably in Japan and
China. The United States has been an anomaly in this regard, for it has
suffered a long dark night in which evangelical fundamentalism has overshadowed
the public square, with its insistence that belief in God is essential
for moral virtue. This is now changing and secularism is gaining ground.
The "new atheists"
have attempted to balance the scales, for religious dissent until now
has been largely muffled. They have appealed to science to criticize the
unexamined claims of religion. This has shocked conservative religionists,
who respond that atheists are "too negative." Perhaps, but this
overlooks the fact that there are varieties of unbelief and that secular
humanists (the bete noire of fundamentalists during the Reagan years)
define their outlook affirmatively in the light of positive ethical values,
not by what they are against but what they are for.
Secular humanists
are generally nonreligious, yet they are also good citizens, loving parents
and decent people. They look to science, the secular arts and literature
for their inspiration, not religion. They point out that religious belief
is no guarantee of moral probity, that horrendous crimes have been committed
in the name of God, and that religionists often disagree vehemently about
concrete moral judgments (such as euthanasia, the rights of women, abortion,
homosexuality, war and peace).
The ethics of secular
humanism traces its roots back to the beginnings of Western civilization
in Greece and Rome, through the Renaissance, the Enlightenment, the scientific
and democratic revolutions of the modern world. Secular humanists today
affirm that every person should be considered equal in dignity and value
and that human freedom is precious. The civic virtues of democracy are
essentially humanist, for they emphasize tolerance of the wide diversity
of beliefs and lifestyles, and they are committed to defending human rights.
But, "how can
you be ethical if you do not believe in God?" protests the believer.
Perhaps such a person should enroll in an elementary course in ethics,
where there is a rich philosophical literature dealing with this question.
The good is usually defined as "happiness" though there are
differences between the eudemonistic, emphasizing enriched self-development,
and the hedonistic, particularly American, brand of intemperate consumption.
Perhaps a harmonious integration of the two theories can be achieved.
I would call it rational exuberance. Philosophers have emphasized the
importance of self-restraint, temperance, rational prudence, a life in
which satisfaction, excellence, and the creative fulfillment of a person's
talents is achieved. It does not mean that "anything goes."
Humanist ethics focuses on the good life here and now.
Secularists recognize
the centrality of self-interest. Every individual needs to be concerned
with his or her own health, well-being, and career. But self-interest
can be enlightened. This involves recognition that we have responsibilities
to others. There are principles of right and wrong that we should live
by. No doubt there are differences about many moral issues. Often there
may be difficulties in achieving a consensus. Negotiation and compromise
are essential in a pluralistic society.
However, there is
now substantial evidence drawn from evolutionary biology that humans possess
a moral sense (see Marc Hauser, Steven Pinker, and David Sloan Wilson).
Morality has its roots in group survival; the moral practices that evolved
enabled tribes or clans to survive and function. This means that human
beings are potentially moral. Whether or not this moral sense develops
depends on social and environmental conditions. Some individuals may never
fully develop morally--they may be morally handicapped, even sociopaths.
That is one reason why society needs to enact laws to protect itself.
There is also of
course cultural relativity, but there are, I submit, also a set of common
moral decencies that cut across cultures--such as being truthful, honest,
keeping promises, being dependable and responsible, avoiding cruelty,
etc., and these in time become widely recognized as binding. Herein lie
the roots of empathy and caring for other human and sentient beings. Such
behavior needs to be nourished in the young by means of moral education.
In any case, human beings are capable of both self-interested and altruistic
behavior in varying degrees.
Secular humanists
wish to test ethical principles in the light of their consequences, and
they advise the use of rational inquiry to frame moral judgments. They
also appreciate the fact that some principles are so important that they
should not be easily sacrificed to achieve one's ends.
To say that a person
is moral only if he or she obeys God's commandments--out of fear or love
or God or a desire for salvation--is hardly adequate. Ethical principles
need to be internalized, rooted in reason and compassion. The ethics of
secularism is autonomous, in the sense that it need not be derived from
theological grounds. Secular humanists are interested in enhancing the
good life both for the individual and society.
Today, a new imperative
has emerged: an awareness that our ethical concerns should extend to all
members of the global community. This points to a new planetary ethics
transcending the ancient religious, ethnic, racial, and national enmities
of the past. It is an ethic that recognizes our common interests and needs
as part of an interdependent world.
Professor Paul
Kurtz is the chairman and founder of the Center for Inquiry-Transnational,
Editor-in-Chief of FREE INQUIRY magazine, and professor emeritus of philosophy
at the State University of New York at Buffalo. For 40 years, Kurtz has
remained the leading organizational and intellectual figure in the humanist
and skeptical movement. His new book, Forbidden Fruit: The Ethics of Secularism
is published by Prometheus Books.
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