George Will On Religion and Founding Needs Ayn Rand's Theory of Rights
"He even says explicitly that neither successful self-government nor “a government with clear limits defined by the natural rights of the governed” requires religion. For these, writes Will, “religion is helpful and important but not quite essential.”"
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The Enlightenment is so named because people became enlightened when they rejected the dogma and authoritarianism from the Dark and Middle Ages. The pursuit of individualism and rationality led to an explosion of knowledge and well being.
The Founding fathers of this country were well read in the ideas of the Enlightenment, particularly Locke, and it was in fact the philosophical basis for this country. Instead of reading Barton's imaginative interpretations, read a real historian, like Bernard Bailyn's classic Ideological Origins of the American Revolution.
This is a forum for reason and individualism in Ayn Rand's philosophy, not for proselytizing religious faith with tortured re-writes of history and grandiose claims for your "depth" as you preposterously write off enormous institutions like the Catholic Church and its history as non-Christian in your tormented revisionism. Your dogmatic ignorance and lack of objectivity do not belong here.
That is patently false. Have you read Ayn Rand? Why are you here?
Not only is the foundation of morality based on the nature of man and the factual requirements for his living on earth, a "Judeo-Christian foundation" of mystic faith and supposed other world makes a morality for life on earth impossible. Subjective decrees of fantasy, subjective "revelations", and imposed duties of subservience explain nothing and are the opposite of any kind of permanent foundation. Rejecting rationality in formulating morality based on the factual nature of man and his requirements for life makes no more sense than accounting for the weather with speculated demons and gods. You don't have a "foundation", you are issuing irrational dogmatic decrees.
What I was pointing out was that many of the posts on this thread were attempting to treat "Christianity" as a single, homogeneous belief set rather than a variety of widely varying belief sets, which can lead one to erroneously conclude many different things. When one recognizes that the individual sects vary WIDELY in their belief sets - in fact even contradicting each other on various points - it then becomes illogical to denounce all by inclusion (fallacy of guilt by association). One must individually address the individual belief sets in order to prove or disprove their validity.
But the kind of mixed premises I am referring to are more fundamental. American Christians for the most part live their lives, and consciously and rationally work, in pursuit of their own values and dreams here on earth. This is in complete contradiction to the essential Christian ideals of other-worldliness, submission, sacrifice and faith even while occasionally paying lip service to it on Sundays. If their actual sense of life becomes undermined by a rise in religion on a broad scale, then the society is doomed.
Drop the obnoxious preaching to us that is we who need to "READ", with tortured polemical references to "First", bizarrely twisted to mean religion was being put first and above all else. Read the history yourself of how the major influences were the Enlightenment, not "ROME" and mysticism, which could not possibly have lead to this country, its spirit, and its success using reason to live on earth.
Unless you want to do some homework yourself and read a book I suggest (because obviously you are not familiar with the facts presented in it), then I think we're done.
The book is "Evidence that Demands a Verdict" by Josh McDowell. He set out in his thesis to disprove the Bible. He became a Christian.
Have you ever seen Abraham Lincoln? How about Julius Caesar? Homer? There's varying levels of evidence to support all of those men. And similarly, there's a level of evidence to support the life of Jesus Christ, and his deeds and works, and his apostles, and their deeds and works, etc.
So please don't go around saying there is no such thing as a "rational Christian".
And your second half of your first sentence... I'm going to choose not to fly off the handle on you for that one. I'll just ignore it unless you decide to continue with it.
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