Lord Mhoram wrote:rusmeister,
Sometimes I don't know if I'm talking to rusmeister, or CS Lewis and GK Chesterton. Need you constantly quote them in order to make your points? You are evidently an articulate person. No need to quote a unitary source.
Hi, LM.
As I've said before, if other people have said it much better than I can, why should I spend hours typing stuff here trying to say the same thing in different words? It is the ideas that matter, and with which I challenge you. If you don't understand something, disagree and can respond, I'll certainly use my own words. (But if I can save myself several hours by pointing to the counter-argument elsewhere, I will.)
What we want to do, no matter what position we hold on what we believe, is, at the very least, to have found (and defeated, if applicable) the best arguments opposed to ours, not the most mediocre or the worst. I have found the authors I quote to be head and shoulders above me, and often there is little that I can personally add - unless it is to clarify something for people today.
So again, if you think that Chesterton is wrong, say so, and why, and if a response will be useful, then I will. I hold this very view on this subject (the unreasonable bias against Christianity). If nothing else, you will have encountered highly original minds (even though they are not mine) that will very likely reveal at least some truth about modern thought to you. I have chosen my champions - you are free to choose yours - or simply to take them on yourself.
Would not a scientist reference the works of Newton or Einstein, rather than simply pride himself on what he alone can discover? (He may well make a contribution to science himself, but he would be a fool to do it without such reference; ie, to attempt to rediscover the wheel.)
BTW, I realize that none of this will "convert" anyone here - only personal experience can do that, I think. But I would at least like to make people conscious of the unreasonable bias shared by many here, and I think Chesterton nailed where it comes from. And logically, a person raised in India might well have similar unreasonable biases against Hinduism, for example. But at KW, Christianity is the target. I think it was a target for SRD as well. The people that are both good and intelligent are unbelievers who are moral - the subtext is always that religion is for idiots; a form of insanity.
"Eh? Two views? There are a dozen views about everything until you know the answer. Then there's never more than one." Bill Hingest ("That Hideous Strength" by C.S. Lewis)
"These are the days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed except his own." G.K. Chesterton