Firstly, not all the reasons are purely logical but some
are merely subjective evaluations. For the purposes of this article Atheist is defined as "one who does not believe in the existence of God or
Gods".
1. I have received no IMO trustworthy accounts of any interaction of any
God or Gods with any humans. All accounts of such encounters that I have
heard thus far have been clouded by alterior motive, happened when the person
was asleep, sleepy, or in some other non-clear state of mind, was experienced when the
person was in need of self-convincing, the person was on
drugs or the event later turned out to be a hoax. Basically,
because these reports are of a supernatural, immeasurable
or unbelievable kind, it is easier to doubt the source than blindly credit the
information.
2. There are thousands of differing religious belief structures which are more or less
mutually exclusive and for the uncritical mind equally believable. Some of these belief
structures do not involve deities. The major point being which one? And
if one, why one? Why any, isn't it just as likely that all of them have it
wrong?
3. As history has progressed, the role of Gods has decreased as
understanding has replaced supernatural explanations for natural events.
If there is no God, then one would think it likely that in our stage
of development, the hypothetical God would only be responsible for
those things which we do not currently understand. In other words, the
remaining God or Gods in our modern society will only be necessary for
the "possibly" supernatural parts of existence. However because
500 years ago God/s were necessary to explain the perfection of the heavens, where
as now we know it's to do with the 4 forces of nature and the 3 families
of matter, then I do not see why this trend will not continue, as it has
for thousands of years now, until understanding will eventually replace
all of the hypothetical God's reasons for existence.
4. If there is a God, how did such a being come into existence? The Big
Bang Theory is, on the surface, a remarkably simple idea. However, I
have heard no such ideas contemplating the creation of God.
5. People who seem to have a broad knowledge about the workings of the
universe as we know it so far do not think that a God is necessary to
obtain a working hypotheses of the world around them. (ie. Albert Einstein, Carl Sagan,
Isaac Asimov, David Suzuki, Arthur C. Clarke, etc.)
An appeal to authority is a weak argument, but not as weak when the authorities
ask you to look for yourself rather than blindly rely on their words which is
what the preachers of faith ask for.
Here I am talking people who know a lot about a large number of fields
of science and philosophy. I believe that belief in an all-powerful
being is intellectual weakness as is
the requirement for an afterlife to
avoid the fear of death.
6. Much of the work of religion seems to be based on guesswork or pure
creativity. The age of the Earth, the age of homo sapiens, history as
it happened over the thousands of years seem to differ from religion to
religion and, most importantly, differ from the objective findings of
archeologists, geologists, biologists etc.
7. I could not enjoy Monty Python
half as much, were I a theist. But on a
more serious note. I have read that some high percentage of New York
Catholic Priests were diagnosed as paranoid schizophrenic by the
MMPI (I think it was around 60%, well over 1000 times the national
average maybe someone could supply me with a reference), and also the
systems of temporal lobe syndrome (or epilepsy) correlate highly with
religiosity. In other words some sick people become devout religious types.
8. I have never seen the distinction between Santa Claus, Easter Bunny,
God, the Googy Monster, or distinctly pink invisible unicorns. All of
these things seemed to be stories told to you by your parents that you
eventually grew out of.
From now on I'll deal distinctly with why I am not a Christian.
9. I have discussed religion with many theists (3 of which I have converted
to atheism) and most of them cannot answer the most simple
inconsistencies in their belief systems. Most of them make great
sacrifice for their belief systems and therefore undergo dissonance when
confronted with ideological impasses. This leads therefore to not think
about the inconsistency, it's better to bury the dissonance (avoidance
behavior) rather than confront the dissonance and move your belief
system accordingly, which may cause much extra dissonance. This is why
I believe we should set up Zealots Anonymous all over the world to help
Christians and other cultists come down from their mind bending cults.
10. Having done psychology I have come across the Gazzanigga split brain
studies and numerous studies involving personality alteration via
neurotransmitter infusion. These operations and drugs which affect the
synaptic gap in neurons can and do radically alter peoples personality
profiles. Their basic awareness, their memories, their mores, their
reactions, their processing capacity, their motor functions: every
function of the brain which has been hypothesised as part of the mind or
soul can be and is effected by these treatments. Why would the soul
alter due to physical changes in the brain? Isn't it much simpler (and correct) to
believe that these personality functions are the direct result of the
brain and not of some intermediary supernatural soul which accomplished
nothing?
11. History has shown that those viewpoints or ideologies with the most
aggressive doctrine are more likely to survive the centuries.
Throughout the history of Judaism, Christianity,
and Islam are numerous examples of
this aggressive viewpoint. This is why they are the dominant views
today. So why, in particular, should the most aggressive ideologies
necessarily be the right ones?
12. A lot of testimony about the existence of a supreme rightness or God
comes from Xtians and Muslims who
claim to have felt God due to this
spiritual ecstacy they had felt during a "religious experience".
However, I also have felt similar feelings to what they described as I sit upon
a country hill at night underneath a cloudless sky and can "feel"
Earth as
a giant spaceship speeding through the Galaxy. I become so overwhelmed
by the immensity and beauty of it all that I stare for hours. However, I
still understand the basic principles behind how the whole of the
universe exists, and none of it requires a God. In fact, if there is this
Creator, it isn't doing anything these days.
13. Believing anything with a conviction that it precludes questioning
is
merely beyond my capacity. I simply can't do it. I have an inquiring
mind and I have found my beliefs to be wrong before so why not again in
the future. To believe beyond question in a supreme, all-loving deity
seems absurd to me for the mere reason that it asks you to suspend
reason.
14. Too often in the past has religion been used as an excuse for the great
evils of human beings. Kings have promised the subjects that they rule
by divine right or that they themselves are descendant from Gods and
are therefore Gods themselves. Torture, genocide, racism, slavery, polygamy,
invasions, mass rape, and war have all been justified under the auspices
of divine authorization. This represents to me that religion is a
powerful tool used by those smitten with power for unscrupulous ends
(was that poetic or what). I do not want to be associated with such vile
acts any more than being human already implicates me.
15. Too often the church does backflips and makes errors. If the church
hierarchy were truly led by a divinity (as most claim) they would not
make such glaring errors. It is because of this desire to maintain a
divine public image that the church is loathe to admit to mistakes until
the mistake is shown to be ludicrously obvious (eg
Galileo, evolution, etc.).
16. As I point out the problems with each individual denomination under
the
Christian umbrella, Christians will often defend by saying "Oh well,
THEY'RE not real Christians, but my church or I AM". This is so common
that for each claim of true Christianity there is probably over a hundred
other denominations chastising them as not real Christians.
17. Church teachings are sexist,
judgmental, arrogant, inconsistent, filled
with authoritative explanation rather than rational explanation and are
therefore not conducive to learning a good life philosophy.
18. The Bible has literally hundreds of ambiguities, inconsistencies,
falsehoods,
and ascriptions to God of horrific, puerile behavior.
Anyone who does not acknowledge that this is true really is not reading
the Bible seriously or has a major mental block in the way of them
seeing it. The Bible is bunk, there is NO denying that. Besides there
are multiple versions of this book. It is constantly being updated (read
"rewritten") to suit the leaders of the church responsible for
the particular version that produce it. There is no such thing as "The Bible"
it is like saying "The Apple is better than the IBM". Which
Apple?
Which IBM? Which Bible? The excuses that Xtians offer for Bible inconsistencies are extremely weak and remind one of the sort of things
that die-hard scientists, clinging to an old dogma, produce in order to
protect an old dogma.
19. The anthropocentric view is a dangerous view for humans to have at
this
point of time. Humans, even non-theists, believe for some reason that
the universe is here for them and that we will not be destroyed because
there is some purpose. This abrogates responsibility. In order for our
species to survive, and personally I think that this would be a good
eventuality, we must realize that the universe is as ignorant of us as
any other piece of space dust and cares naught whether we propagate and
fill the universe or extinguish in a nuclear blase. We are responsible
for our own survival. We cannot look to some all powerful Daddy to come
in, when we have sufficiently stuffed it up for us to learn our lesson,
and make it all right again. Once we stuff it up, it's stuffed up.
Religions promote an anthropocentric view, to the detriment of our
species. It is for this reason that I actively oppose Christianity and
any other anthropocentric religion.
20. Religions have played their role in history. They were one of the major
cultural influences in uniting peoples into close-nit communities. It
enabled the survival of the species through some of it's toughest tests.
But we have reached adolescence now and we must give up our childhood
fantasies. We must quickly reach maturity before we become another
teenage drink/driving or drug overdose or suicide statistic in the
Universe's intelligent race survival book. I'd like to be part of the
maturing process not the part that holds on to childhood days.
21. No-one has given me a good explanation of why humans are any more
deserving of a soul and an after-life than other animals. When did we
acquire a soul (at birth, at conception, at baptism, never)? Why don't
dolphins get souls? There are many unanswered questions in Christianity:
Should we use contraception, pop-up toasters, refrigerators? None of
these things are mentioned in the so called 'God's word'. If God had
written the holy word, why did "He" write some of it allegorically and
other parts literally without marking the allegorical parts clearly to
distinguish them from the literal sections. Basically, if the Bibles
are meant to be manuals for life, they are extremely poorly written and
are highly confusing and are unclear on the most basic points. I am sure
a God could do a much better job. It makes much more sense that they are
not the works of a God but are the works of people attempting to keep
control of their flock.
22. Since the beginning, religions have attempted to make predictions about
the future and have been invariably wrong. Despite this appalling
track-record, religious leaders continually predict the date of some
Armageddon or future mundane event (such as resurrections of exorcised
wives: we saw this in Australia recently). Some of the evangelical
types have told their flock, "God has told me to raise 3 million
by
next week". This is blatant fleecing and nothing more.