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Atheists 'not fully human', says Cardinal Cormac Murphy O'Connor

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Please note I do not want this thread to be another about the existence or otherwise of god/s but about what I regard as the huge double standard in our society when it comes to judging the behaviour and speech of theists and atheists.

 

This double standard is I think exemplified by the lack of any notable outccry when the head of the Catholic Church in England and Wales used a recent BBC interview to deny the humanity of atheists. You can hear the exchange here or read a transcript:

 

Roger Bolton – a lot of church leaders speaking on national matters sound rather defensive but you’ve gone on the attack because you’ve talked about secularists having an “impoverished understanding of what it is to be human” they might find that quite offensive mightn’t they?

 

Cardinal Cormac Murphy O'Connor - I think what I said was true, of course whether a person is atheist or any other...there is in fact, in my view, something not totally human, if they leave out the transcendent. If they leave out an aspect of what I believe everyone was made for, which is, uh, a search for transcendent meaning, we call it God. Now if you say that has no place, then I feel that it is a diminishment of what it is to be a human, because to be human in the sense I believe humanity is directed because made by God, I think if you leave that out then you are not fully human.

 

Now aside from the fact that regardless of whether or not we are “made” to “search for transcendent meaning” it’s an absurd strawman to claim that atheists don’t “search for transcendent meaning” (it's possible for people to search for something and come to a different conclusion from you Cormac). It’s amazing that this man could deny the humanity of a significant section of the population of this country and the world there be barely a murmur about it. If he’d said the same thing about Jews or Muslims there can be little doubt that this would be front page news.

 

Atheists & secularists such as Dawkins are frequently accused of being ‘extremist’, ‘shrill’, ‘strident’, ‘intolerant’… simply for questioning the claims of theists and challenging the privileges of religious groups. Dawkins has said he thinks that theists are deluded, foolish, wrong and so forth and sometimes motivated by their beliefs to commit evil acts yet I don’t think I’ve ever heard Dawkins even come close to denying the humanity of Catholics or any other religious group.

 

So far as I can tell Dawkins & other New Atheists tone and language would be thought unremarkable if they were challenging any other idealogical grouping other than theists. Politicians, columnists & religious leaders say far more 'extreme' things both in terms of language used and what they're actually arguing for all the time without attracting such opprobrium.

 

Just imagine if on national radio an atheist had said something like; “I think what I said was true, of course whether a person is catholic or any other...there is in fact, in my view, something not totally human, if they deny rationality. If they leave out an aspect of what I believe everyone was made for, which is, uh, a search for transcendent meaning using reason and evidence. Now if you say that has no place, then I feel that it is a diminishment of what it is to be a human, because to be human in the sense I believe humanity is directed because we were not made by a magic man in the sky, I think if you disagree then you are not fully human.

 

Would there not be howls of outrage that the BBC would give a national platform to something expressing such a hateful message? Would Catholics not be demanding that the speaker be prosecuted for 'inciting religious hatred'?

 

Once again please note this is not a thread about the existence or otherwise of god/s, there's already a thread for that. This thread is intended to be about whether or not there is a double standard in the way theistic and atheistic/pro-secular speech and actions are judged in this country.

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You will get double standards all over the place, not just in this discussion.

 

You get double standards from all sides in all discussions, you just need to dig around a bit for it sometimes.

 

Double standards are not unique to people involved in the theists 'vs' atheists arguments.

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He hasn't denied anything - he has stated his beliefs. Note the use of "in my view" and "I believe" which you seem to have carefully not bolded!

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You will get double standards all over the place, not just in this discussion.

 

You get double standards from all sides in all discussions, you just need to dig around a bit for it sometimes.

 

Double standards are not unique to people involved in the theists 'vs' atheists arguments.

:huh: When did I claim or even imply that double standards are in anyway unique or confined to how theists and atheists are judged?

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Some might say there is something not quite human about the child abusers whose vile actions are practised and/or condoned by many in the catholic priesthood, not forgetting the cruelty inflicted on the helpless by many in the sisterhood.

 

Look inward Mr O'Connor before you condemn anyone else as 'not quite human'.

Give me an atheist any day over your lot.

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He hasn't denied anything - he has stated his beliefs. Note the use of "in my view" and "I believe" which you seem to have carefully not bolded!

So if I was to say "in my view Jews are not fully human" or "I believe that Catholics are not fully human" you wouldn't think I was denying the humanity of Jews or Catholics?

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I vaguely remember some geezer with a wierd 'tache and unmanageable fringe back in the 30's once stating that he believed Jews, Slavs, Homosexuals, Gypsies, and the disabled not to be human. Wonder if Canon Cormac Murphy O'Connor is a mate of his?:suspect:

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He hasn't denied anything - he has stated his beliefs. Note the use of "in my view" and "I believe" which you seem to have carefully not bolded!

 

My "belief" is that a moderator should be expected to realise the irrelevance of that.

 

:huh:

 

Edit: As plekenhov and saxon51 have pointed out so obviously.

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It doesn't interest me one bit what this guy thinks about atheists - why should it bother any convinced atheist ?

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does he not mean in a spiritual sense i could be wrong.

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The opinion of a man who believes in fairies, bearded or otherwise, is not something that would greatly concern me.

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It doesn't interest me one bit what this guy thinks about atheists - why should it bother any convinced atheist ?

 

It's bothersome that somebody can say something so hideously offensive about ANY group and get away with it. As previously said ... try getting a major public figure to say that he/she believes Jews are "not fully human" and see what happens.

 

Why doesn't the same thing happen when it's said of some other group?

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