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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As for your choice about birth - do you believe that we originated from nothing? I happen to believe that we existed before this earth and that we chose to come here for the experience. Birth is an entry through a portal to a new realm of experience. Seems to fit both circumstances and I doubt the analogy with reference to baptism was randomly selected.
The intolerance of the objectivist religion towards others that are productive and good is
disturbing to me.
Rejecting even the possibility of a higher intellect,creator, when you look at nature is not logical at all.
Don't get me wrong, you do have to choose.. but you never will unless God draws you. And if He draws you, you WILL choose, not because he forces you, but for the same reason you eat when you're hungry, when you didn't eat 2 hours before because you have changed, and now you actually want to. He changed you, and now you want to.
What is more, you disagree, but are not disagreeable - unlike some others. The world would be a better place with more like you.
btw - the individual also pulls the juvenile tactic of down voting all the posts to which they disagree. Like I have said ad nauseum, I don't care about the points, but the actions speak volumes about the maturity of the poster.
I'm not talking about the whole altruism thing and those who espouse that believing in a deity automatically makes you a slave to same. That isn't part of the theology that I believe. In fact, any theology that isn't based on a fundamental premise of free-will is really only one of slavery.
Belief that one will have to answer for one's actions in life is a powerful positive motivating factor for many. Even if you didn't hold such a belief, it would seem rational to support such a system, as the opposite is potentially anarchy.
I don't know if you've been subjected to my theory of the "Baddest Ass on the Block." Without a final accounting, what is to stop each of us from seeking to be the BA? I know, AR and others have argued that it is in an individuals own best interest to recognize the rights of others, as that is the only way for their rights to be retained. I say that history is replete with counter examples. In fact, history is nearly universal in that there has always been a ruling bully, there still are today, across much of the world. And increasingly, we are seeing the same take hold here in the US.
That is primarily a Catholic doctrine that is without foundation in the Bible. Some other sects have adopted it - knowing no differently - but I don't agree with it. I adhere to the principle of personal accountability - we'll be responsible for our own actions and not those of our progenitors.
You've made your own point more eloquently than you can possible imagine.
But in the off chance that life isn't merely an exercise in complete futility and pointlessness, I'm going to choose a course that provides something to look forward to after death. If I'm disappointed, I've lost nothing and won't even realize it.
You and others can deny all you want that Christianity had no bearing at all on the US Constitution but the phraseology, the importance of being able to worship how YOU choose, were major key components in the Constitution AND the Revolutionary War against England.
Regardless of what you think or believe, here is another DIRECT quote from Jefferson on the US Constitution and our founding based on Religious notions.
Religion, as well as reason, confirms the soundness of those principles on which our government has been founded and its rights asserted. – Thomas Jefferson to P. H. Wendover, (1815. ME 14:283)
No government can continue good but under the control of the people; and people so demoralized [lacking good morals] and depraved as to be incapable of exercising a wholesome control, their reformation must be taken up ab incunabulis. Their minds [must] be informed by education what is right and what wrong, be encouraged in habits of virtue and deterred from those of vice by the dread of punishments, proportioned indeed, but irremissible. In all cases, follow truth as the only safe guide and eschew error which bewilders us in one false consequence after another in endless succession. These are the inculcations necessary to render the people a sure basis for the structure of order and good government. – Thomas Jefferson to John Adams (1819. ME 15:234)
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