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In his 2004 book, The End of Faith, Sam Harris pointed out
that alone of all human assertions, those qualifying as
"religious," almost by definition, automatically demand and
typically receive immense respect, even veneration. Claim that the
earth is flat, or that the tooth fairy exists, and you will be
deservedly laughed at. But maintain that according to your
religion, a seventh-century desert tribal leader ascended to heaven
on a winged horse, or that a predecessor had done so, without such
a conveyance, roughly 600 years earlier, and you are immediately
entitled to deference. It has long been, let us say, an article of
faith that at least in polite company, religious faith —
belief without evidence — should go unchallenged.
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