Jerry Coyne On Atheists, Antitheists, And Humanists
Failure to accept gods is no more a leap of faith than is doubting
the existence of the Loch Ness Monster, Bigfoot, or Santa Claus. It’s
not “faith” when you refuse to accept a proposition for which there’s no
evidence.
In general I agree with Oluo’s thesis that atheism usually jibes
with a liberal outlook. Many conservative political views derive at
bottom from religion. And there’s a lot of evidence that religion is
often an outgrowth of social injustice: the heart of a heartless world.
Ergo, if you’re an antitheist and want to work towards the
abolition of faith, one way to do that is to improve the lives of the
impoverished and dispossessed.
But not all atheists are antitheists, and not all of them accept the
connection between social well-being and nonbelief. Atheism is simply
the refusal to accept supernatural deities, and there are plenty of
conservative atheists. The view that this life is all we have, and that
we should help our fellow creatures, is not atheism but humanism.
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