AgNoStiC MuSliM
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Perhaps then we should look relative figures.
Countries with largely atheistic populations have better standards of living than religious societies...Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Japan, Switzerland, New Zealand, France....and much lower crime rates!!
Most Nobel Prize winners, and indeed most influential people (in the positive sense) aren't very religious at all....
The standard of living argument is a flawed one, the Islamic world at its prime was leading the globe in science and literature, this was of course at a time when the religion was not quite as "polluted" as it has become today, but it debunks your theory that progress and development is achieved by atheism or secularism alone. Modern day examples include the Gulf States, where "religious" Arabs govern, and "development and progress" is out pacing the countries you mentioned (not saying that they have caught up - just that the rate of progress is phenomenal).
There are a lot of factors that have contrived to keep societies backward - culture, the lack of political evolution, being conquered etc. It is incorrect and dishonest to cherry pick one aspect of those societies and ascribe their relative backwardness to it.
I am saying that belief in any of the established religions can potentially lead to what you call "rationalization of evil".
I say that most of those religions in their "pure unadulterated form" do not offer any leeway to do that - when crime is committed, it is Man who is contriving to find ways to justify it -if religion was not there, it would have been something else - race, ethnicity, tribe, culture, tradition, political system - in fact, all of those have been used as justification throughout history, and would probably have been used as justification had religion not been around.
Lets face it, civil society is unnatural. Men commit crimes very easily and modern society can disintegrate into chaos at the drop of a pin. Why should we give it more and more reasons to do so, by encouraging belief in superstition?
If a "God" says that "though shall murder, discriminate, and wreak havoc" - of course such beliefs shouldn't be encouraged - just like Stalins and Mao's shouldn't - but since Islam (or my hypothetical religion) does not, then no "evil" will be rationalized. Restricting religion will not stop such men, they will find other vessels to incubate their hate.
There has been no successful religion ever, in the history of man, without a system of conversion/protection and concentration of power!! Right
from the primitive african paganism to the supposedly advanced Christianity or Islam.
In effect, your so called "religion" isn't a religion at all, but just an idea, like the millions of other ideas floating aroung in peoples' minds!!
Also, there hasn't been a single working religion without a set of predifined ground rules, so that a clear distinction can be made between "us" and "them", between the tribe and the enemy.
That is more or less what you are defining to religion to be. Its contemporary definition is much looser:
3. A set of beliefs, values, and practices based on the teachings of a spiritual leader.
4. A cause, principle, or activity pursued with zeal or conscientious devotion.
It could also be argued that making "us vs them" distinctions is simply a matter of human nature, and religion, with most preaching equality and respect for all, actually trying to repair the sort of mindset that sets stock by such "us vs them" values. Obviously Man has manged to finagle out of the restrictions of religion throughout history, and actually commit the opposite in its name, but I still maintain that those atrocities would have occurred in the absence of religion as well.
Additionally, I can see that you are trying to create a watered-down version of Islam by picking and choosing the parts you like and discarding the ones you don't. I like your optimism and hope, but sadly, that isn't how things work out in the real world. Religion is inextricably mired in politics and power, and will continue to do so if we treat religion as a public matter rather than a private one.
Then whats is kosher and what isn't? How do you distinguish the followers from the unbelievers?
Your religion is so vague that no theologian would consider it separate way of thinking.
Basically, it can be definded as a weak and watered down version of Humanism with a belief in a featureless creator who basically does nothing else...in effect....what is called deism.
Look, who cares what Kosher or Halal is - Those can simply be called "quaint" traditions even - the deeper concern is what principles a belief system puts forward. And it is those principles that determine whether "evil" is justified or not. The principles I put forward are a summary of what I take away from the Quran - and are really the make or break parts of this argument - the rest of the "details" as you call them are just window dressing.
I completely agree with you that religion and politics have become mired in each other, and that I believe is unnatural. Religion should stay personal and be a source of spiritual solace. But unfortunately it has become a vehicle for certain peoples ambition for for power and control, but I reiterate, such people would have found other means of mischief.
Nuclear power can be harnessed for both good and Chaos, but do not blame "nuclear physics" for that, blame those men who took the knowledge and used it become a destructive force - it is similar with religion.