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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!decwrl!parc!rocksanne!brahms!eradm
- From: eradm@wbst845e.xerox.com (Erik Radmall)
- Newsgroups: alt.atheism
- Subject: Re: How much should we read?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan20.193250.21342@spectrum.xerox.com>
- Date: 20 Jan 93 19:32:50 GMT
- References: <1jk51aINN9o9@OPAL.SYSTEMSX.CS.YALE.EDU>
- Sender: news@spectrum.xerox.com
- Reply-To: eradm@wbst845e.xerox.com
- Organization: Xerox Corporation
- Lines: 28
-
- In article 1jk51aINN9o9@OPAL.SYSTEMSX.CS.YALE.EDU, Pai-Satish@CS.Yale.Edu (A. Satish Pai) writes:
- >
- > Hi, all!
- >
- > In several encounters with theists, I have been accused of not knowing the
- > contents of various religious texts (the Quran, the Bible, etc.) deeply enough.
- > I am reasonably familiar (I think) with the contents of many of these, for
- > instance I have read, at various times, most of the Bible, but I have not
- > undertaken a deep study of the Bible in all its possible metaphorical
- > interpretations. It seems like often the theists will not accept anything less
- > than a deep scholarly study of the text in question before listening to
- > anything an atheist might have to say.
- >
- > So, my question is, how much is enough? (Obviously for some theists no
- > amount of study by an atheist might suffice...) How do the rest of you deal
- > with such an accusation, that you have only a shallow understanding of the
- > principles of this or that religion, that you have not _understood_, that once
- > you really _understand_, then and only then will you believe? And this
- > understanding can come only by studying the religious texts in depth...
-
- A lot of multidisciplinary study is your best bet. Do not read only about
- the world religions. Also study major philosophies, trends, psychology,
- anthropology, sociology, myths and legends, biology, geology, quantum physics,
- and the rest of the hard sciences. Most of all, study each with an open
- mind unfettered by "what you know." It is especially important to approach the
- study of world religions with a desire to understand each from the point of view
- of its proponents. This will not only help you to hone your own ontology, it
- will serve as a defense for it.
-