While you state this as your point: "...the non-religious man may have non-religious beliefs which influence his decisions while the religious adherent has both religious and non-religious beliefs influencing his decisions.", but that is not the entire truth, because that is not the argument here and simple statements of the obvious and other attempts to distract will not conceal this.
If you are you suggesting that "religious people with (present day) political power" and who hold religious beliefs which influence their decisions is not the argument here, what are you trying to make the argument about?
Atheism contains six of the seven characteristics of religion as described in the framework set forth by Ninian Smart in what is known as the "Seven Dimensions of Religion". Not every religion has all of these characteristics.
Actually, Ninian characterized those as a "scheme of study":
Smart’s sevenfold scheme of study:
1.Doctrinal
2.Mythological
3.Ethical
4.Ritual
5.Experiential
6.Institutional
7.Material (added in his 1998 text)
He omits the definition's supernatural aspect and so did you, (presumbly to try lumping atheism in with superstitious religious beliefs). This is intellectually dishonest, especially so when atheism does not meet #1, 2, 4, or 6, of Ninnie's theorectical parameters of study. If you want to move the goalposts, find a different game to play. Atheism is not a religion; "a-theism": not theism.
The only characteristic Atheism really has missing is 'Ritual', and even that is starting to appear in Atheism
What an outrageous claim and made without providing evidence to support it as well. Not only is the first part of the claim false, (4 of the 7 characteristics of parameters of study do not apply to atheism), but a vague claim that "ritual is starting to appear in atheism" is challenged.
-- with it being a newer religion it lacks the history that breeds rituals.
Again, atheism isn't a religion just because you keep calling it one, (which is a logical fallacy, as you know).
It is only by a strict definition that Atheists would impose, in that Atheism would not be considered a religion (nor would certain types of Buddhism), but, again that is simply the Atheist's definition.
That's hogwash; atheists aren't 'imposing' the definition of atheism, (that's something you're trying to have Ninian do); it's drawn from the dictionary definitions - consensus meaning. All such definitions are "strict" in such a sense, otherwise we'd redefine xtians as 'zombies' by dint of them meeting the underlying conditions of that term's definition. Your post-hole digging results in showing empty holes in your argument, not the moving of goalposts.
It is simple enough for most to realize that if Atheism cannot be defined in terms sans religion that it must be in fact a type of religion.
Such sophist arguments may be "simple" however, they aren't accurate. No terms, (concepts consisting of words), can be defined without using other terms, (words). Atheism is the rejection of superstitious beliefs which comprise a religion. Atheism cannot be a religion if it contain no such superstitious beliefs. If you are implying that atheism contains any superstitious beliefs of it's own, state them.
'Atheism is not a belief system. Atheism is not a religion, an ideology, a world view, or anything like that. If this seems wrong, consider the
fact that theism is also not a belief system, religion, ideology, world view, or anything like that. Theism and atheism are single data points or positions: theism is the presence of a belief in the existence of at least one god of some sort, atheism is the absence of any sort of belief.
While theism is not a belief system, many belief systems are theistic in that they contain or rely upon theism. Christianity is a theistic belief system (specifically, a theistic religion). Many new age belief systems are also theistic. A political party founded on Christianity would probably qualify as a theistic ideology.
All the same is true about atheism: while atheism itself is not a belief system, there are many belief systems which are atheistic. Objectivism and Humanism are atheistic philosophies. There are also atheistic religions: Religious Humanism, Raelians, Ethical Culture, some forms of Buddhism, etc.
When you described atheism as a belief system, you made a common error but it is an error nonetheless. If you want to talk about logic, there's a simple observation that might make it clear for you:
If "atheism" is a "belief system," then you should be able to point to the single belief system that is shared by all Objectivists, communists, liberals, conservatives, Buddhists, Raelians, anarchists, Religious Humanists, Secular Humanists, Jews, and libertarians who are atheists. What is that belief system? What are it's various premises, positions, doctrines, propositions, etc.?'
I provided no dissembling or strawman ...
Your preceding replies in this thread belie your simple denial. Reread them or not, (such 'arguments' fail regardless).
I simply alluded to the fact that the gun you were waiving about had no bullets in it. Well why don't you simply pull the trigger and see the results, eh?
What, and miss another opportunity to watch you shoot yourself in the other foot with the blanks of your non-arguments? Where's the profit in that?
Overly paranoid is what they are. The rule of law protects us from the fear you allude to. If such were to come to be that the action was made then the rule of law would be void and thus our obligations to it. As free men, we do not look to others for our freedoms because in so doing you are not free.
So, a de facto theocracy would have to manifest overtly as one before you'd take up arms and join the resistance or, you'd be singing "onward xtian soldier, marching as war"?
I have a question for you, if you drove by a church as it was dismissing would you fearfully roll up your windows and lock your doors and hurriedly try to drive by unnoticed for fear of your life?
No. Unless the 'zombies/walkers' are in direct pursuit or, pose an immenient threat, it's best to let them stumble around aimlessly.
And even if it had happened then you have absolutely zero proof that a theocracy would be attempted and every bit of proof that it wouldn't (not to mention that it wouldn't be allowed if it were).
"Proof" of attempts? You mean like Presidential executive order #13199 wasn't "allowed"? Also, the goundwork for a de facto theocracy was suggested and the gap between covert and overt lies in increments between the two.
In general, religious republicans want to be left alone and freed from the steadily tightening grasp of government. They want less regulations and increased personal responsibility ...
Yet, repressive republicans want megacorporations to steadily tighten their grasp on the economy, free of anything that would restrict this, (while at the same time pulling the "too big to fail" other leg for bailout funds in the billions). Where's the personal responsibility of wealthy speculators, (both "republican" & "democrat" alike), for crapping where they eat?
... where the secular progressives want increased government control and restriction and central planning.
Generally, a good percentage of people, (secular, progressive, non-secular, backward ...), would prefer that the pillaging and plundering by corporate 'vikings' be either kept to a minimum or, not so obvious that even the dimmer ones notice a recessive economy caused by such. The 'vikings' haven't been self-restricting or self-regulating thusfar, (although central planning won't have the desired effects, neither would unrestricted deregulation). The answer? Pay me for hints; there's no free lunch.
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").
That is a bad comparison.
Nope, it's quite apt. There is no evidence extant or presented now therefore, if "faith" is held despite a lack of evidence, it is based entirely on an unsupported belief and trust in something which has every indication of being false, (e.g., deceiving the believer).
The 'leap of faith' would be to the ledge that you cannot see from where you are, and not the case you present: where you can clearly see everything and you see it isn't there.
Using your comparison to a ledge, the believer is trusting that a ledge they cannot see is there nonetheless and makes a leap of faith. The non-believer has no such faith that a ledge they cannot see is there anyway and does not make such a leap, (does not suspend disbelief). Who has the greatest probability of falling; one who leaps, sight unseen, hoping for a ledge that in all probability isn't there or, another who does try to jump the abyss of the unknown by trusting in unseen supernatural ledges?
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').
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It is you who is mistaken, unless you claim to have greater knowledge of my mind than I do.
Read the statement again; ' ... xtian belief systems, (which you may or may not distinguish significantly from your personal "faith")' ...
I suspect that is a level of conceitedness that even you don't possess.
I suspect that you you missed the conditional on the first pass. If I were as conceited as you project, I'd just assume you were stupid.
You will notice that you are relying on external agents to qualify the fidelity of the spouse and that alone would require some measure of a degree of faith in their honesty and dedication and capabilities.
They've got these devices around nowadays, (video/audio surveilence).
I think your tan came from unsafe interaction with a poorly focused HAARP collision suspiciously coincidental to the tornado outbreak (jk obviously). I haven't been to a beach in ages and am on the water virtually every day -- I think I need a vacation.
What tan?
Everyone needs a vacation every now and then - even those who haven't been doing anything, (their vacation from doing nothing would be termed as "work").