Outgrowing God Quotes

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Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide to Atheism Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide to Atheism by Richard Dawkins
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Outgrowing God Quotes Showing 1-22 of 22
“Isn’t it remarkable that almost every child follows the same religion as their parents, and it always just happens to be the right religion!”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner's Guide
“When people say they are atheists they don’t mean they can’t prove that there are no gods. Strictly speaking, it’s impossible to prove that something does not exist. We don’t positively know there are no gods, just as we can’t prove that there are no fairies or pixies or elves or hobgoblins or leprechauns or pink unicorns; just as we can’t prove that Santa Claus or the Easter Bunny or the Tooth Fairy don’t exist. There’s a billion things you can imagine and nobody can disprove.”
richard dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide to Atheism
“But failure to disprove something is not a good reason to believe it.”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide to Atheism
“Pantheists are a little vague about what they believe. They say things like ‘My god is everything’ or ‘My god is nature’ or ‘My god is the universe’. Or ‘My god is the deep mystery of everything we don’t understand’. The great Albert Einstein used the word ‘God’ in pretty much this last sense. That’s very different from a god who listens to your prayers, reads your innermost thoughts and forgives (or punishes) your sins—all of which the Abrahamic God is supposed to do. Einstein was adamant that he didn’t believe in a personal god who does any of those things.”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide to Atheism
“Scientific truths are true even if there’s nobody around to know about them; were true before humans appeared; will be true after we are extinct.”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide
“physics come from, so God must have made them up.’ Wherever there is a gap in our understanding, people try to plug the gap with God. But the trouble with gaps is that science has the annoying habit of coming along and filling them. Darwin filled the biggest gap of all. And we should have the courage to expect that science will eventually fill the gaps that remain. That is the theme of this final chapter.”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide
“People growing up in different countries copy their parents and believe in the god or gods of their own country. These beliefs contradict each other, so they can’t all be right.”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide
“We can’t prove there are no fairies but that doesn’t mean we think there’s a 50:50 chance fairies exist.”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner's Guide
“One of my pet peeves is the habit of labelling young children with the religion of their parents: ‘Catholic child’, ‘Protestant child’, ‘Muslim child’. Such phrases can be heard used of children too young to talk, let alone hold religious opinions. It seems to me as absurd as talking about a ‘Socialist child’ or ‘Conservative child’, and nobody would ever use a phrase like that. I don’t think we should talk about ‘atheist children’ either.”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide to Atheism
“But that doesn’t stop it being true. And far more often than it is bewildering or frightening, scientific truth is wonderful, beautiful. You need courage to face the frightening, bewildering conclusions of science; and with the courage comes the opportunity to experience all that wonder and beauty. The courage to cut yourself adrift from comforting, tame apparent certainties and embrace the wild truth. Like my friend Julia did when she lost her Christian faith.”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide
“You may have heard that DNA is a ‘blueprint’ for a body, but that’s deeply wrong. Houses and cars have blueprints. Babies don’t. The difference is entirely separate from the fact that cars and houses are designed whereas babies aren’t. Here’s the deeper difference. In a blueprint there’s a one-to-one ‘mapping’ between each bit of the house (or car) and each bit of the blueprint.”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide
“It is a matter of history that the spread of Islam, from Arabia throughout the Middle East and the Indian subcontinent, was due to military conquest. And the same goes for the spread of Christianity by the Spanish conquerors in South and Central America,”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide to Atheism
“There are so many different faiths. How do you know the holy book you have been brought up with is the true one? And if all the others are wrong, what makes you think your holy book isn't wrong too?”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide to Atheism
“If I’d been born in ancient Greece, I’d worship Zeus and Aphrodite”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide to Atheism
“Before writing was invented and before scientific archaeology started, word-of-mouth storytelling, with all its Chinese Whispery distortions, was the only way people learned about history.”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner's Guide
“There are so many different faiths. How do you know the holy book you have been brought up with is the true one? And if all the others are wrong, what makes you think your holy book isn’t wrong too?”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide to Atheism
“But that doesn’t stop it being true. And far more often than it is bewildering or frightening, scientific truth is wonderful, beautiful. You need courage to face the frightening, bewildering conclusions of science; and with the courage comes the opportunity to experience all that wonder and beauty. The courage to cut yourself adrift from comforting, tame apparent certainties and embrace the wild truth.”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide to Atheism
“Atheists don’t have to fear a great spy camera in the sky. They only – so the argument goes – have to fear real cameras and real policemen. Maybe you’ve heard the cynical witticism ‘Conscience is knowing that someone is watching’.”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner's Guide
“Tanrı İbrahim'e İshak'ı yakılacak odunlar üzerinde bağlamasını emrettiğinde İbrahim sorgulamadan emre uymuştu. Tanrı İshak'ı kurtarmak için son anda araya girdiğinde, bir koçu göndermiş ve boynuzlarının yakındaki sık bir çalıya takılmasını sağlamıştı. İbrahim mesajı alıp Tanrı'ya istediği sunağı vermişti. Bu koçun aniden ortaya çıkışının resmi Kilise Okulu yorumlaması, olayın Tanrı'nın insanları kurban etmeyi durdurtup onların yerine hayvanları kurban edin deme yolu olduğudur. Fakat öyküdeki Tanrı karakteri o günlerde insanlarla sürekli konuşmaktadır aslında, çünkü zaten İbrahim'e İshak'ı öldürmesini söyleyen odur. Yani insanlar yerine koyunları kurban edin demek için zavallı İshak'ı böylesine korkunç bir ateşten gömleğe sokmak yerine bunu basitçe söylememiş olmak nedendir?”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide to Atheism
“These beliefs contradict each other, so they can’t be all right”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide to Atheism
“When people say they are atheists they don’t mean they can prove that there are no gods. Strictly speaking, it’s impossible to prove that something does not exist. We don’t positively know there are no gods,”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner's Guide
“Yet it is an astonishing fact that nearly half the people in that great country believe literally in the story of Adam and Eve. Luckily the other half is there too, and they have made the United States the greatest scientific power in the history of the world. You have to wonder how much further ahead they would be if they weren’t held back by the scientifically ignorant half who believe every word of the Bible is literally true.”
Richard Dawkins, Outgrowing God: A Beginner's Guide