Okay, Okay.
The death toll from the Inquisition is somewhat in dispute, it would seem. The Catholic Church (for whatever reason) doesn't seem terribly interested in detailing such things.
I found this, from the online
malleus maleficarum:
. Estimates of the death toll during the Inquisition worldwide range from 600,000 to as high as 9,000,000 (over its 250 year long course); either is a chilling number when one realizes that nearly all of the accused were women, and consisted primarily of outcasts and other suspicious persons. Old women. Midwives. Jews. Poets. Gypsies. Anyone who did not fit within the contemporary view of pieous Christians were suspect, and easily branded "Witch". Usually to devastating effect.
In the interest of balance, I will note that Wikipedia posits the toll from the
Spanish Inquisition as relatively low, although they do not attempt to lay out a death toll for the
various other inquisitions total.
Death tolls for the Crusades are equally hard to come by, but here's one possible source:
http://users.erols.com/mwhite28/warstat0.htm#EuropeanThere's also a header under "General Religious Mayhem":
# General Religious Mayhem:
* From Aletheia, The Rationalist's Manual (1897)
o 7,000,000 during the Saracen slaughters in Spain.
o 2,000,000 Saxons and Scandinavians lost their lives opposing the introduction of Christianity.
o 1,000,000 in the Holy Wars against the Netherlands, Albigenses, Waldenses, and Huguenots.
# Witch Hunts (1400-1800)
* Wertham: 20,000
* Jenny Gibbons <
http://www.interchg.ubc.ca/fmuntean/POM5a1.html> cites:
o Levack: 60,000
o Hutton: 40,000
o Barstow: 100,000, "but her reasoning was flawed" (i.e. too high.)
* Davies, Norman, Europe A History: 50,000
* Rummel: 100,000
* Bethancourt: The Killings of Witches, lists 628 named and 268,331 unnamed witches killed as of Dec. 2000, and estimates that between 20,000 and 500,000 people were killed as witches. <
http://www.illusions.com/burning/burnwitc.htm?>
* M. D. Aletheia, The Rationalist's Manual (1897): 9,000,000 burned for witchcraft.
* 5 Jan. 1999 Deutsche Presse-Agentur: review of Wolfgang Behringer's Hexen: Glaube - Verfolgung - Vermarktung:
o estimates cited favorably
+ Thomas Brady: 40-50,000
+ Merry Wiesner: 50-100,000
+ Behringer, at lowest: 30,000
o estimates cited unfavorably
+ Gottfried Christian Voigt (1740-1791) extrapolated from his section of Germany to calculate 9,442,994 witches killed throughout Europe. From this came the common estimate of 9M.
+ Mathilde Ludendorff (1877-1966): 9M
+ Friederike Mueller-Reimerdes (1935): 9-10M
+ Erika Wisselinck: 6-13 Million
* MEDIAN: Of the 15 estimate listed here, the median is 100,000. If we limit it to just the ten estimates that are cited favorably, the median falls between 50,000 and 60,000.
Some of that may overlap with the Inquisition/MM numbers, certainly.
# France, Religious Wars, Catholic vs. Huguenot (1562-1598)
* Robert J. Knecht The French Religious Wars, 1562-1598 (2000): Deaths during the wars estimated at 2M to 4M
Now, fuck a duck, we're only dealing here, partially, with Europe in the past millenium... (with the Crusades) I haven't gone into the deaths caused by Islam, Biblical wars, or the years between Jesus and the year 1,000. Honestly, it's not worth it to me to sit up all night trying to prove this particular point. But logic states that if the Scientific Method as we understand it has only been around for 500 years or so, and religion (in whatever form) has been around for a lot longer with a pretty impressive list of wars and persecutions to its name, even if you accept that Hitler and Stalin were the responsibility of "science" (which I don't) it's clear, to me, that the numbers in the religion column are going to have it beat by a mile.
Whoa, wait a minute, you've already asserted as a fact the statement that religion has killed more people than science -- and now you're hedging!!! Why, then, did you make such a statement in the first place? Are scientists allowed to lie, or just spout nonsense off the top of their head? If so, please, elaborate. Really.
For the record, in response to your question, I believe that both atheists and religious people can be moral people, good people. I believe that both atheists and religious people can be evil people. Good people use religion or science to do good things. Bad people use religion or science to do bad things. I think it is silly and wrong for religious people to dismiss out of hand the great illumination that science brings, and I think it is silly and wrong for atheists to dismiss out of hand thousands of years of human experience, since, after all, atheists generally don't dismiss equally unscientific ideas such as love and justice. You're all broken, all of you!I hedged because it occurred to me what a massive pain in the ass excessively arguing the point would be. I was right.
But, I will grant you, it's a nebulous question, and I typed that line on the fly; I'm not prepared to do a thesis on it at one in the morning, so if that means I don't know what the fuck I'm talking about, hey, I can live with it.
For the record, over here, I don't think it's "silly and wrong" to believe whatever you choose to believe about the universe; but, personally, if you want to talk about thousands of years of human experience, much of it is contradictory. As I alluded to before, plenty of people have believed in God(s), plural, just like many have believed in one, singular. Most of the monotheists I know don't treat pantheism as an equally plausible alternative to monotheism. Many monotheists accept that the major religions are loosely talking about the same chap (the word not intended to be overly gender specific referring to the deity, but most of them do think it is a "he") but many, many more are convinced that they, and they alone have the one direct line to the TRUTH, and everyone else is deluded.
Therefore, when you talk about that which atheists "dismiss out of hand", what are you talking about? Which God? All of them? The belief in any invisible beings with magical powers?
To this, I will add- I am by no means, personally, a strict materialist. For purposes of political discussion in this country, particularly now, I classify myself as an "Atheist", because if the choice is a simplistic, binary one, that's where I'm at. Today. As I alluded to before, I really think my beliefs are pretty much in line with Taoism, but overwhelmingly my attitude towards reality is, I believe in using useful mental or semantic maps to describe the territory of what is "out there", but I try to recognize, and remind myself, that they are maps- and crucial, to my way of thinking, is the idea that the map -whatever it may be- can be updated or thrown out depending on new or contradictory data.
As for the rest of your post, you know damn well, if you have any intellectual honesty at all, that some atheists or "skeptics" make fun of believers in religion or any other "unscientific" topic such as UFOs, Bigfoot, or whatever. It happens even here on the good old DU. And it is equally true that some religious people want to impose their evil, hypocritical, and abhorrent views on all the rest of us. I say again, you're all broken, you're all the same thing, you're all humans.Well, I try not to do that. I elaborated in one of the threads you may be referring to, that I have had experiences in my life that I can't explain via what is known as "common sense". (For the record, I don't believe they require a mystical, all powerful creator, either) But I wouldn't float them willy-nilly and expect not to encounter the occasional "bullshit". I don't run around spouting off about them, or using them as the basis to try to convince anyone else about things like, say, quantum interconnectedness or a collective consciousness.. But more importantly, the value those experiences had to me are not dependent; whatsoever! on how anyone else feels about them, or whether or not they "believe" that they happened.
Some religious people are able to approach their faith this way. But many, many religious people are not.
I don't bag on people's faith, I really try not to- but, again, in areas where these things intersect with public, political life in the USA, yes, things like creationism or intelligent design are (in my mind, at least) fair game.
]I did read it. I did understand it. But the joke was executed in a supremely incompetent fashion. You see, if you want to expose the foolishness of teaching "Intelligent Design" in school, it is ridiculous to try to make your point by concocting puerile crap like the Spaghetti Monster, because the adherent of ID, or anyone else who is sympathetic to religion, can simply say "Everybody KNOWS you just made that nonsense up!" and so most people will laugh at you for a fool and miss your point. If you want to hit them where it hurts, bring up a religion with a pedigree and with a billion or so believers -- talk about the Islamic, or the Hindu creation story -- that's what really exposes the phoniness of the issue.
Good grief, if you scientists can't even figure something like that out -- well, I'd probably still want one of you to operate on me if I had cancer or something... but I ain't gonna be opening up the candy box.Well, first off, I've been saying for a LONG time, hell, if they're going to teach one person's interpretation of "Creation" in science class, they have to teach them ALL. The Hindu, the Islamic, The Yanomamo creation Myth. Turtles All The Way Down, and the ravings of the schizophrenics on the street.
But that's the beauty of the FSM thing, which, while you found "incompetent", I found hilarious. Because from a scientific perspective, there IS no difference between the Hindu Myth, The Genesis Account, or the Flying Spaghetti Monster- because until there is evidence to back up ANY of them, they aren't science. Why is something that came from an old book intrinsically more weighty than something that you can say "but you just made that up"? Many of us get that feeling when we read big parts of the bible. That's the point.
The FSM uses absurdity to show that religious people are demanding special
scientific treatment for ideas that don't deserve it.
That's not to belittle faith, only to hammer home that religion doesn't belong in science class, not until it can be verified through the same scientific method that every other assertion is; at which point, it, too, will become science.
I don't want to hit
anyone where it hurts. I just want to leave science and science classes to the scientists.
And trust me, if you get cancer, you don't want anything from me beyond a get well card. We may
all be broken (actually, we're all perfect, its the remembering that fact that's the hard part) but I'm not the guy to fix us. I can change the oil in my car, that's about it.
Peace.