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Why be an atheist?
Letter to an atheist
Religion - the
noble lie
Absolute
moral standards
Atheist
parent - church school
Do
animals have souls?
Where
religious power comes from
Why
do we exist?
The
Ladder of Deception
The
celibacy of priests and nuns
Letter to an
RE teacher
Letter from Laura
Letter from Dred
Scott
Letter from Thomas
Tricks of the
trade
Wayne's World
13
Guest writers
Monthly
update
5
Sample essay answers
Superman and Clark Kent
Einstein
Tolerance
of religions
A
note on Islam
Glossary
of Terms
My
Motives
Links page
Home Page
E-mail think@writeme.com
Hofesh
- web site of Prof. Dan Mahler and others
Also
see this article on the life of secular Jews in Israel by Prof. Dan
Mahler
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"If mankind minus one were
of one opinion, then mankind is no more justified in silencing the one
than the one - if he had the power - would be justified in silencing
mankind"
John Stuart Mill, philosopher
and economist (1806 -1873)
| It would appear that
human society has never, in all of its history, dealt for so long
with another non-existing topic, as with this entity named 'God'. |
It seems there is no greater absurdity than the discussion of nothing.
‘Nothing’ is nothing but... nothing, and in order to define it, there
is no simpler word than ‘nothing’. There is also no need to prove that
the ‘nothing’ is indeed ‘nothing’, as any knowledgeable person knows
what nothing is. Even the most comprehensive encyclopedia does not cover
this topic with the slightest explanation. And yet, there is one nothing,
worshipped by most people on earth, who claim its existence as a super
power above every creature and above the whole universe. They even force
their opponents (what an insult to intelligence) to prove their own
claim as to its nonexistence. As if one needs to prove that nothing
is no more than nothing!
While the weak and powerless follow this unique nothing, it is the strong
and powerful that stand out in their belief. The God card has been cynically
played as a foundation for the power of many rulers, who were ready
to use any tool, including the nothing tool, in order to realize their
regime and implement it "forever". A significant amount of courage and
innocence are required in order to break the illusion of the nothing
- to shed light on reality in its true naked form - like that little
boy in the so very realistic story of Hans Christian Andersen.
The Mantra of the Big Nothing
Along with water, protein and sugar, we also take of this special nothing,
discussed here, in our mother’s milk. We also receive it as instant
food, in tin cans or in plastic boxes. It is spoken to our ears in lullabies,
as in "good night sleep tight, with nothing". Our nannies and teachers,
from kindergarten through high school - they all tell us again and again
- between maths lessons and literature lessons, between history and
biology, the mantra of the Big Nothing, captivating children with biblical
stories and, later, adults through biblical study.
Once we have grown and reached that age when we feel, or perhaps we
just think we feel, that we have the power to reasonably (reason! Where
have you hidden since childhood?) test the thousands of details planted
in our heads by our parents, nannies, teachers and educators - most
of us fail with one of the most established and basic nothings in the
human mind and in society in general - the nothing embedded in the term
‘God’.
It would appear that human society has never, in all of its history,
dealt for so long with another non-existing topic, as with this entity
named ‘God’. Devoting to it so much effort and so many resources, and
still very far from the correct answer (what is "correct"?). The term
‘God’ is forced into our mind so intensively and so consistently, connected
with every experience and event in our life, from our first breath,
until it becomes accepted as real. We have been falsely led to believe
in its existence to such extent, that even if thousands of little Hans
Christian Andersen’s boys follow us all day and shout "The king is naked!
The king is naked!", we will continue to walk naked, as if we have no
human reason, as if we had never tasted the fruit of knowledge, because
this nothing is very difficult to get rid of.
Human society is largely conservative and does not tolerate rebellion.
Sometimes it happens that a certain rebellious element succeeds, in
spite of overwhelming public resistance, to put society on new track,
a better one, more decent and human. However, concerning our special
nothing, the road is long and rough. The rebel against the divine nothing
has always been ostracized. In all societies and religions they have,
at the very least, been subjected to insulting and negative names such
as "agnostic", "atheist", or simply tagged as "anti". The absurdity
is that while the "anti" do not dare call the believers of the nothing
by that name, they - the carriers of the flag of reason - are disgraced
by all. They are called with every dirty word raised by the leaders
of the nothing, and they suffer boycott. "Atheists" - this name was
used by the ancient pagan Greeks to name those who denied idolatry.
Atheists, in its relative meaning, was also used to name the first Christians,
following Judaism and believing - how odd - in a single unique nothing,
denying the existence of the false god idols - the many nothings.
The Establishment of the Nothing and its Fighting
of Atheism
Atheism is thus a rational definition of the view that puts man in line
with criticism by reality and reason. It defies the archaic emotional
perception and snuffs out the signs of mysticism. Atheism calls men
to look bravely at their own reflection in the mirror, clearly declaring
that they - men - disconnect themselves, knowingly, from conventions
accepted in the past, and that from now on the nothing will be just
nothing, with no costume to turn it into a super power, neither a God
nor idols.
The beginning of atheism was probably simultaneous with the beginning
of faith in the divine nothing. However, it took thousands of years
for men to achieve the maturity of thought to define these views of
theirs and to speak their words, even to themselves, without fear. Atheism
was formed as a clear and explicit view only in the 19th century in
the writings of Karl Marx and Friedrich Nietsche and, as an organized
social movement, with the "Freethinkers". Ludwig Feuerbach, one of the
first philosophers to deal with atheism, attacked religion from a psychological
point of view, claiming that religion is derived from the dependence
of man on nature and that God is nothing but the essence of man; in
his book, "The Essence of Christianity", written in 1841. Man has turned
his self-essence into a special personality, having its own existence,
prays and sacrifices to it. (Similar viewpoints are expressed elsewhere
on this web site - Atheism Central.)
The development of science has promoted the atheistic idea. It is quite
clear why religious people worldwide, possessing various monotheistic
beliefs, fight science and its conclusions furiously, up to the point
of creating a "pseudo-science" in the form of what appear to be scientific
theories. This includes both the innocent and malicious misquoting of
scientists’ words. This misquoting typically manifests itself in the
arbitrary use of fragmented parts of various scholars' works, in a selective
way, for contradicting theories such as Darwin’s, and "proving" the
eternity and "truth" of the divine nothing. (See how Einstein has often
been misquoted in this way here.)
Most of the world’s rulers, throughout history, with the exception of
the communist regime of the Soviet Union, surrendered to the ideas of
the divine nothing. Not necessarily because they believed in them, but
because they recognized the immense power of the establishment of the
nothing - the priests, the clergy, the dervishes - and, for the sake
of keeping their position, they always preferred to form an alliance
with the authority of the nothing, in an effort to ensure their survival.
Even the greatest of today’s super powers, the United States of America,
returns to and gathers around the divine nothing, promoting it on its
currency; and, with the recent governmental changes, we witness it receding
even deeper into the depths of that nothing.
No Democracy in Belief
The thoughts expressed in this paper were not meant for the discussion
of the psychological human need to believe in the existence of God as
a super power. This will be discussed by someone else, some other time.
This paper was meant to make the reader understand that within this
domain of "belief" and "disbelief" ("atheism" if you will), there is
no democracy. Here, the majority does not rule. As the majority in our
world decides in favor of, and immortalizes, the establishment of the
nothing, and enforces (how sad) this emptiness disguised as the truth.
In this realm of belief, even a single person standing out alone against
six billion other people - can be right, and all six billion can be
wrong. This paper is here to say that concerning nothing, especially
including the divine nothing, regardless of whether such an idea is
accepted by all or most since the dawn of human history; it has no correlation
to the term "truth" and to the alleged truth of that divine nothing.
| Within this domain of
"belief" and "disbelief", there is no democracy. Here, the majority
does not rule. As the majority in our world decides in favor of,
and immortalizes, the establishment of the nothing, and enforces
this emptiness disguised as the truth. In this realm of belief,
even a single person standing out alone against six billion other
people - can be right, and all six billion can be wrong. |
As modern human beings, whose thoughts should be based upon reason and
science, it is not reasonable to accept an axiom of belief as a truth.
It is now time for us to release ourselves from the embarrassment involved
with the perception of divinity and with the rituals surrounding it
(‘One must have the "Mezuzah" on the doorpost’, ‘It is not appropriate
to attend a funeral without a "Kipa"’, ‘Do not say "there is no god"’,
‘You can never know that...’, and a whole host of other rituals). It
must be understood that regardless of the strength that the notion of
the existence of a God has on humanity, it is nothing but an essence
of belief. It is not "real", bearing a philosophical form, it is an
entity that exists only in the fertile imagination of man, who created
God in his own image.
Prof.
Dan Mahler
Translated
from Hebrew by Nitsan Duvdevani and Daniel Feinstein.
The original article (in Hebrew) was published in issue 23-24 of the
"Free Judaism" magazine, October 2001

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