Last
Saturday (January 12th) I was walking down Talbot Street in Dublin when I was beckoned to stop by one of
those religious ‘enthusiasts’ that you see from time to time. I had a few
minutes to kill, so I decided what the hell? (I am aware of the ironic choice
of wording) and stopped to talk to him.
For those
of you who aren't aware of my religious standpoint, I consider myself to be
agnostic. While I do recognise the work that science has done in the expansion
of our knowledge of the universe, I believe that there are aspects of the religious
argument that it will never be able to disprove. Digression aside, I chose (in
the conversation on Talbot Street )
to neither hide my own beliefs nor attempt to argue for them with him. He was
there to present his standpoint and I allowed him to do so.
Now, there
were a number of points he made that I found dubious and ill presented, and
others that I have heard refutations for before (Pascal’s Wager for one) but
again, rather than challenging him, I took it on board and promised I’d consider
what he said. Toward the end of our conversation he recommended a number of
books to me regarding his argument, one of which I have actually picked up
today, and provided me with an email address to contact him.
To once
again digress from the main point of this post; I've had the last two weeks
booked off work and I’d been considering doing something “different” this week –
something I wouldn't usually do. Prior to this I thought it would be something
outdoorsy (rock-climbing, hiking etc.) but this intellectual pursuit might
actually turn out to be it.
On point;
we’re so used to ignoring or arguing with people who don’t share our exact
ideas and values these days. I don’t know what I’ll get out of this, but at the
very least I've stopped, listened and given someone else the chance to make an
influence on my life.