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Current time: April 27, 2024, 11:59 am

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Atheist holiday.
#11
RE: Atheist holiday.
"Holiday?" I don't understand what you're trying to say. Can you elaborate please?

Darwin is a strong contender. But I think he's only a component of what I'd like to celebrate, so I don't know that I want to name it specifically after him and lose the focus of the more general idea of secular reasoning.
Religious but open minded about the arguments of atheists? You may have spent your whole life learning about the arguments for religion. May I present to you 10 segmented hours for the case against it?
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#12
RE: Atheist holiday.
I thnik the idea of an atheist holiday is terrible.
ronedee Wrote:Science doesn't have a good explaination for water

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#13
RE: Atheist holiday.
what about a date a lot of people died in the hands of a religious group for their lack of faith. Kinda like an atheist holocaust, never again, kinda thing, remembering the atheist dead?
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#14
RE: Atheist holiday.
(April 9, 2013 at 8:39 pm)Golbez Wrote: "Holiday?" I don't understand what you're trying to say. Can you elaborate please?

Darwin is a strong contender. But I think he's only a component of what I'd like to celebrate, so I don't know that I want to name it specifically after him and lose the focus of the more general idea of secular reasoning.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darwin_Day
Darwin Day already exists.
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#15
RE: Atheist holiday.
Not in the fucking bible belt it doesn't.
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#16
RE: Atheist holiday.
(April 9, 2013 at 11:17 pm)Minimalist Wrote: Not in the fucking bible belt it doesn't.

http://darwinday.org/events/darwin-day-tennessee-2013/
But if we walk in the light, as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus, His Son, purifies us from all sin.
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#17
RE: Atheist holiday.
(April 9, 2013 at 8:50 pm)CleanShavenJesus Wrote: I thnik the idea of an atheist holiday is terrible.

I can imagine billions of religious people who would agree with you. I would expect this and yet have little reason to consider their feelings on the matter. Can you explain what makes it terrible?

ReBig Grinarwin_Day. Thanks. This is definitely something I need to start tracking and promoting. But again, I think his significance specifically supports science/evolution. I think that's a great start, but I want to broaden the theme to include the ways in which religions are bunk.

Re:religious onslaughts. Relevant, but kind of morbid for my liking. I feel like the way in which this can best appeal to on-the-fence moderates is by not overtly, or at least actively attacking the things they might hold dear. That might be too hot-button/contentious to gain their trust. So I'd personally wish for something a little more passive.

Just kind of thinking aloud here. If the idea of this is to celebrate reason/evidence/secularism, then I think something symbolic of that would be a massive evidential discovery that maybe was at odds with something the church had previously made claims against. The emphasis would simply be on the evidential breakthrough, but there could be passive undertones that we should abandon faith-based claims that have no evidence. Examples include:

*Copernicus discovering that the Earth travels around the Sun (and again by Galileo soon after that).
*The age of the universe is 14.6 billion years old.
*Galileo discovers gravity affects all objects equally (versus Aristotle's belief that the heavier object would be faster.)
*Luis Pasteur discovers the germ theory of disease, disproving spontaneous generation.
*Charles Darwin publishes On the Origin of Species.

In contrast, the church and/or many of its members believed (and might still believe) that the earth was 6000 years old, was immovable and the center of the universe, and Adam and Eve were the first humans, and that we didn't evolve.

I think examples like these show a stark contrast in support of evidence, reasoning, and science vs. dogmatic, superstitious beliefs. We could pick a date associated with case that yields the biggest contrast and most significant discovery. I'm not sure I've thought of them all, so I was hoping to compile a list of this sort, and choose from the contenders. But again, the "holiday" would support more than just the discovery. It would support all secular, rational thinking. This would just give meaning to the date to reenforce the celebration, rather than picking a random day, or a hostile one (National Day of Reason).

Other interesting discoveries:
http://listverse.com/2009/01/19/10-debun...-the-past/
Religious but open minded about the arguments of atheists? You may have spent your whole life learning about the arguments for religion. May I present to you 10 segmented hours for the case against it?
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