Religion
In reply to the discussion: Can you give an example of an argument against religion that is ... [View all]Boojatta
(12,231 posts)The concept "dogma" isn't entirely clear to me. Are we talking about some quality of various statements, or are we talking about how the statements are presented? For example, I imagine that if some statement is presented with no explanation and no description of the thought process that generated it, then it might be a dogmatic presentation, even though it might be possible to introduce the same statement in a non-dogmatic manner.
I imagine that a dogmatic presentation could have one advantage: any defects in the thought process that generated a statement could have a kind of guilt-by-association effect, provoking people to harshly judge the statement itself, even though the statement itself might be true.
On the other hand, most of the time it's probably more important to ensure that we are dealing with ideas and not merely words, understanding rather than mere memorization. Thus, I think that a non-dogmatic presentation is almost always better.
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"But if I were to go on to say that, since my assertion cannot be disproved, it is intolerable presumption on the part of human reason to doubt it, I should rightly be thought to be talking nonsense."
I don't think that it's an intolerable presumption to doubt the claims of religion. In fact, I think that most people who believe in God don't have good reasons to believe in God. I think that they are in a sense lucky: what they believe happens to be true or close to the truth.