Feeling Ways About Things
Atheists have only one thing in common - they do not believe in a theistic god. So I certainly can’t speak for all atheists, but I can tell you how I feel and how most of the people I have encountered, read, watched, interacted with, etc., feel.
For an atheist, life is incredibly precious. We are utterly insignificant in terms of the size of our known universe, but the fact that we are even alive at all is extraordinary. Think of it this way… for me to be born, my parents had to be born, and their parents, and theirs, going back billions of years all the way through the evolutionary chain to simple cells. Religious or not, that fact is breathtaking.
Since we have only this one short time to be alive, every interaction and choice become more poignant. There is no “purpose” and there are no eternal consequences… but that’s why the majority of atheists are also humanists. We want life, for everyone, to be good RIGHT NOW. We want ridiculous religious sect wars to stop. We want million-dollar churches sold to provide food and shelter for those that have none. We want people to stop quoting obscure passages out of a 3000 year old book as an excuse for bigotry, racism and homophobia.
One of my favorite quotes, from Sam Harris, is, “Where faith really pays its dividends, however, is in the conviction that the future will be better than the past, or at least not worse.” Atheists don’t believe our personal future will be better… we’ll be dead. But we do hope the future will be better for our children; for those that our lives impact; for the world as a whole. ~JJ
I always worry a bit if you need hope from an outside source. What happens if that outside source of hope slips away?...
I don’t consider myself an atheist per se, but this is good.
Not to mention, and forgive me if this is perceived as quantum mysticism, that everything is connected atomically and...