Warrigal
SF VIP
- Location
- Sydney, Australia
You have the right, DooDer, but exercising the right of ridicule is a right that should not be overused. It makes one a total bore.
It it OK if I still believe in Santa Clause and the Easter Bunny ?
Neither are humans all logical, not even the scientists, even though they like to think that they are.As SPOCK from the Star Trek Program would probably say about ALL RELIGIONS "IT'S JUST NOT LOGICAL"
You have the right, DooDer, but exercising the right of ridicule is a right that should not be overused. It makes one a total bore.
Sunny, I am a former science teacher and a former atheist so I am not unaware of the arguments about the existence/nonexistence of a deity.
What I object to is the non-scientific arguments of the more militant atheists such as all religious education is indoctrination and a form of child abuse. In this case the burden of proof is on the ones making the assertion, because they are expressing an opinion as a matter of belief.
When Richard Dawkins says that it is immoral to give birth to a child with Downes syndrome if the mother has the choice to abort it he is stepping outside his scientific expertise and entering a field where his opinion is no better than anyone else's but he comes across as some sort of scientific prophet, and a fundamentalist one at that in that he does not concede other positions.
There are many other atheists, past and present that I respect but not the more dogmatic ones.
So what is your acceptable level of criticism, AKA, ":censure, condemnation, denunciation, disapproval, disparagement, opprobrium, fault-finding, attack, broadside, stricture, recrimination;" ? Are they all a form of derision? Even if true?
Derision is defined by tone, not truth. My acceptable level of criticism is dialogue where two parties engage in discussion from different viewpoints without labelling the other stupid..
Is it acceptable to have an opinion on ANY faults historically or the tenets practices? If I criticize ANY religion for what might be reasonably construed as either criminal behavior of practitioners, or, silly practices judged by community standards? Or is it just those directed solely at Christianity that you find objectionable?
Is any level of fault finding acceptable, or is Christianity not to be ever faulted?
Or is it just those directed solely at Christianity that you find objectionable?
Yes, apparently it was in response to a twitter question.Dawkins was giving his opinion when asked as I recall. In matter of fact most that have a choice follow his position as I understand it.
Later, after considerable backlash, including parents of Down syndrome children, he modified his words and apologised.Dawkins had responded on Twitter to a woman's comment about what she should do if she were pregnant with a Down syndrome baby."Abort it and try again. It would be immoral to bring it into the world if you have the choice," tweeted Dawkins in response.
Richard Dawkins is a Darwinian biologist (invertebrates) and is entitled to his opinion on moral matters just as much as anyone else but not more than anyone else. The question of whether a woman should terminate a pregnancy is a very personal one and involves few others. It was bad enough when laws denied women that choice by criminalising safe medical abortions but it is just as bad to be told that unless one chooses to abort a handicapped child you are behaving in an immoral way.On Thursday, following the backlash over his comments, Dawkins issued an apology and explanation on his website.
"Those intrepid enough to venture onto my Twitter feed will have noticed a new feeding frenzy yesterday (Aug. 20), for which I apologise," wrote Dawkins.
"My phraseology may have been tactlessly vulnerable to misunderstanding, but I can't help feeling that at least half the problem lies in a wanton eagerness to misunderstand."
In his apology, Dawkins also defended his views on abortion for Down syndrome babies, arguing that once "Down syndrome is detected, most couples opt for abortion and most doctors recommend it."
"Of course, I regret using abbreviated phraseology which caused so much upset. I never wanted to 'cry havoc,'" continued Dawkins.
[h=1]Hedonism galore at Aussie resort[/h]Published: 8:57PM Thursday November 13, 2008 Source: Reuters
An Australian holiday resort will hold a month-long, nude anything goes party to combat an expected economic downturn, media reports said.
"Tough economic times call for stiff measures," Tony Fox, the owner of the White Cockatoo resort in Mossman, in tropical Queensland state, told the Courier-Mail newspaper.
"It will be a hedonism resort, where anything goes for a month. It doesn't take rocket science to work out what it means," Fox said, naming March as the risqué party month.
The controversial clothes optional resort made headlines three years ago when police were called to end partner-swapping parties after a swathe of public complaints.
"You've got to wonder what sort of people go and why. Where is the moral code of behaviour and how do you stop jealousies and fights?" Cairns Catholic Bishop James Foley said after Fox's announcement.
But local regional Mayor Val Schier said she was not opposed to the event as long as no laws were broken.
"People in tropical north Queensland are extraordinarily creative," Schier said.
"It is tough economic times and as long as it is with consenting adults, then there is no problem."
Australia's tourism in industry is being hit hard by global economic turmoil with official figures showing a 7.6% decline in overseas visitors in September.
Industry leaders expect holiday bookings may drop by up to a third in early 2009 and are planning a new international advertising campaign to coincide with blockbuster movie Australia starring Oscar-winning actress Nicole Kidman.
Fox said his resort was almost fully booked for the month-long rainforest party.
http://tvnz.co.nz/content/2308075/425829.xhtml
MARINA HURLEY'S DEDICATION TO science was sorely tested during the three years she spent in Queensland’s Atherton Tableland studying stinging trees. The entomologist and ecologist’s first encounter with the Gympie-Gympie stinging tree produced a sneezing fit and left her eyes and nose running for hours. Even protective particle masks and welding gloves could not spare her several subsequent stings – one requiring hospitalisation – but that was nothing compared with the severe allergy she developed.
“Being stung is the worst kind of pain you can imagine - like being burnt with hot acid and electrocuted at the same time,” said Marina, who at the time was a postgraduate student at James Cook University investigating the herbivores that eat stinging trees.