On the assignment sheet, students were asked to answer the overall research question about how the world began. Students were also asked to ponder the following questions:

  • How did the world start?
  • Who started it?
  • When did evil start or did it always exist?
  • Are people inherently good or evil or neither?
  • What is morality?
  • What is religion?
  • What is Christianity?
  • What does it mean to be a Christian?
  • Is God real?
  • Is Satan real?

“I don’t care what anyone says,” Gray said. “If you start out with, ‘How was the world started and then who started it,’ that implies it wasn’t science [and] that it was an entity, a person, a being.”

  • EleventhHour@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Hear hear. I may respect one’s right to their beliefs, as that’s also my right, but an individual’s beliefs can be dog shit. I have no obligation to respect that.

    • solsangraal@lemmy.zip
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      4 months ago

      the problem is that the belief has become such an integral part of identity, that anything anyone says about the belief is taken as a statement about the person i.e., “an attack on my beliefs is an attack on ME personally”

      and way too many fucking people just go along with that attitude, like that’s just a fine way to live life, instead of kindergarten-tier fallacious