The relevant difference is that the non-religious man does not have religious beliefs influencing his decisions.
I am well aware of the point you are tying to make ...
Yet, your comments seem contrary to any such awareness. Why don't you tell me what point you think I'm trying to make instead?
Your argument is invalid because atheism is not a religion, (a disbelief is not a belief and are polar opposites). Neither is atheism any more "radical" than some of the extremist religious adherents, (and in fact, pales in comparison to religions as far as radicalism is concerned).
It certainly qualifies as a religion, and the reason is that it address the nature of religion.
What? It most certianly does not qualify as a religion, (under the defining terms and conditions pertaining to that word, rather than 'crap you make up to support your weak point'). If, by "addressing the nature of religion", you mean refusing to believe unsubstantiated religious claims and vagueness of 'faith', that still doesn't qualify an atheistic position as a "religion". Since you don't get to whimsically redefine terms, (unless you're nuts), the remainder of responses along such lines will diminish accordingly.
A disbelief requires a focus of a subject to not be believed in.
Nope. A disbelief can be generalized, (e.g., someone who does not believe in magic need not specify a particular type or method of magic) or, specialized, (as in not believing in a specified concept). Someone who does not believe in any "gods/goddesses" isn't required to focus on any particular "god/goddess".
Remove religion from the topic of atheism and you are left with absolutely nothing.
Well now, let's invert that premise and see if it still holds; remove theism from religion and you're left with ... nothing. Yep, it's all good.
It cannot stand on its own sans religion and thus its existence is inseparable from religion.
I have not been out drinking tonight, have you started early? That sort of comment is equivalent to asserting that, without "hot", "cold" cannot stand on its own - they're inseparable, (except of course where they're separated by being opposites).
I use the word 'radical', because every other word a democrat or a liberal uses anymore to describe anything conservative or republican is 'radical'. I will join in this trend until the word loses all its efficacy.
Ah, like "irony", eh?
See my earlier reply to understand why this is not a strawman and is in fact a valid statement of clarity.
I saw your earlier dissembling, raised you another refutation by lighting your strawman on fire with logic and disregard your empty claim of clarity, (because it lacks evidence, substance and veracity).
The truth that you are prejudice against people who do not think exactly like you do.
What a whiny dodge of a weak position; I oppose unreasoned, unsubstantiated religious beliefs - of course such people don't think like I do. That isn't prejudice, it's reason vs. irrartionality. You sit on the fence of irrationality and still want to dangle your leg over into logic. That's what gives you those splinters, not me. Any rancher knows that it's difficult to mend a fence while you're sitting on it.
(by the way, I would also be concerned about a theocracy, and even if it was one based exclusively on my religion).
Then the thread, the OP's point and my subsequent points were not entirely "redundant", (unless by "concern", you meant 'only if you get to be in charge, then it'd be okay'?).
Don't misunderstand me, a theocracy would be a bad thing indeed and something that the religious of us Americans would be entirely opposed to and would once again stand in opposition and resistance to it.
You know, I can probably extrapolate the reasons for that, based upon available data. There are even more religious variations of xtianity now than back when the first amendment was ratified. It'd be difficult to establish a monolithic theocracy if the subsects are bound to squabble. Squabbling could lead to shooting, (hel, a theocracy could lead to shooting), and that's a lot of shooting in the name of 'god'. Sounds familar though. I do however, agree that a theocracy would be a "bad thing", (likely for reasons at some variance with yours).
Wow what a red herring you ask. He already failed to gain the Republican nomination in 1988, and I doubt he would try again at the age of 86 -- but he would certainly not stand much of a chance. Once again you are overly fearful of things that have already failed to come about.
Robertson was used an an example, not a herring. The point you missed was that any candidate has the potential of being a religious fundie, (overtly or, convertly).
It is the secular progressive that proposes such concepts as "for the good of the many" and "ends justify the means" and such nonsense.
That same palp is expounded from church puplits on any given sunday and those folks aren't all "secular progressives", (by the way, if we get to use 'boogeyman terms like "secular progressives", I'm going to inflict 'repressive religious republicans' on you in turn ... r3).
The secular progressives continually attempt to exercise control and restrict the wills of the governed. The secular progressive is deluded into believing they know best and as is often demonstrated on even this forum, they will inject themselves into anything with but the attempt to control.
Wow, sounds like the same thing repressive religious republicans do from all appearances!
It doesn't require self deception.
If there is no substantiating evidence to support 'faith' then holding such a belief is self-deceptive, (this is because if one had evidence, no 'faith' would be required - the implicit clause being that one must 'suspend disbelief' in a self-deceptive manner in order to make a "leap of faith").
There is no deception in my faith.
You are mistaken; the xtian belief systems, (which you may or may not distinguish significantly from your personal "faith"), are riddled with deception, dissembling, contradictions and outrageous claims made with no supporting evidence, (reference: any 'bible').
In fact my faith dictates that I explore the curiosities of our existence as such is given to my nature.
Jesuit?
It is through that exploration that I realize the impossibility of existence. That knowing that time is distance then the concept of measuring it only becomes a bubble unit onto itself and has no significance externally -- and that in some state it has no value or measure. My faith led me to conclude that there is knowledge beyond my knowing or understanding and that I couldn't appreciate the basics of them even if they were explained to me as a child. You often mention emergent phenomena and surely the fact that it has no meaning in an empty set has not escaped you? To have any considerations for emergent phenomena requires as much faith as my own.
Emergent phenomenon are not posited as empty sets, nor as arising from one. We could sit and and ramble mathematically about dimensionally overlapping sets, cyclic islands of stability and such but, beyond a mostly narrow interest, I do not apply the concept of 'faith' to such phenomenon nor, any mathematical basis for it - that's not required. Either emergence is a valid theory or, it is not - 'faith' has no bearing on that, (just as it has no bearing on the existence of anything else besides the immaterial concept of "faith" itself ... 'wishcraft'?).
The analogy holds beyond your deceleration of failure. Notice in your "cursory examination" you cannot prove the spouse has remained faithful and at best could only prove a lack of faithfulness.
Sure I could. The suspicious spouse could hire private investigators to determine the other's physical fidelity. No one can hire an equivalent investigator to confirm fidelity in a theoretical supernatural being. Who ya gonna, faith-busters?
What trampling? Why would I champion "religious freedom" for people trying, (ever so evangelically), to impose their superstitions upon others?
You reveal yourself here. You would uphold the Bill of Rights regarding freedom of religion to protect peoples freedom to believe as they wish.
Some revelation; I'd uphold the Bill of Rights, sure.
If you do not hold such a position then you are tacitly admitting that given authority you would strip such rights from people, and thus you would become your own fear.
It's possible that you nearly sprained a synapse trying to 'out-clever' yourself there however, no such admission, (tacit or overt), was made. There's a huge difference between someone believing whatever nonsense they want to and them imposing their nonsense upon others, (as in a theocracy).
Parenthetically, there aren't any pragmatic ways to strip the ability of others to believe in nonsense away from them, (sans electroshock, etc. - not practical), nor would it necessarily be wise for political leadership to do so, (opiate ... masses ...yada-yada...).
You are now then proposing to lock the door to the house they helped build. The position you put forth here actually brings me to alarm to imagine our entire elected officials to think as you do. I can imagine all the things they would ban and destroy would make Hitler look like a saint.
No doubt you can imagine several things far less likely than a theocracy however, let's try a hypothetical thought experiement, if you will. Let's say that religious affiliation barred a politician from office as a premise. What sort of difference can you imagine which would be at variance with a 'secular' government?
By the way good to see you back. I noticed you seemed absent a few days and I found the only thing significant was the tornado's in Texas and I had concerns that maybe you lived in the area and were temporarily displaced. Apparently that was not the case and hopefully you and yours are well.
Thanks. I could say I was working with Tesla technology in a undisclosed location northeast of Texas which was completely unrelated to any emergent weather phenomenon whatsoever in the Lone Star state. Or, that I was on a nice trip to a friend's California beach house, (how they can afford that place, no one will say but, the sunburn supports this more than the occasional static zap from metal - which I don't experience!)
I do know some people around Austin and outer areas but, they're fine. Plus, I have this tan to prove I was at thebeach the whole time, dammit.