Growing up, I turned atheist the very first time I considered religion seriously. It was of course, the naive atheism of a nerdy, science-and-tech-obsessed pre-teen, but even as my thinking and emotions underlying the position have gotten more sophisticated over the years, the position itself has only strengthened. Any time I encountered an issue that made me revisit the idea of religion, I always found a more powerfully satisfying (both emotionally and intellectually) resolution, or even better, a more fertile direction of further questioning, outside of religion. I'm not a militant, performing atheist like Richard Dawkins, and am willing to go through the motions of religious observances to avoid hurting others, but basically I stopped taking religion seriously by age 12, except as a social, cultural, literary and political phenomenon. For much of my life so far, my source of resolutions of issues that are
Can Software Eat God?
Can Software Eat God?
Can Software Eat God?
Growing up, I turned atheist the very first time I considered religion seriously. It was of course, the naive atheism of a nerdy, science-and-tech-obsessed pre-teen, but even as my thinking and emotions underlying the position have gotten more sophisticated over the years, the position itself has only strengthened. Any time I encountered an issue that made me revisit the idea of religion, I always found a more powerfully satisfying (both emotionally and intellectually) resolution, or even better, a more fertile direction of further questioning, outside of religion. I'm not a militant, performing atheist like Richard Dawkins, and am willing to go through the motions of religious observances to avoid hurting others, but basically I stopped taking religion seriously by age 12, except as a social, cultural, literary and political phenomenon. For much of my life so far, my source of resolutions of issues that are