I have but a few, but at the top of my short list, is...Thomas Pain. He faught in the war with George Washington and in the French Revolution and nearly perished in prison and stood against all manner of resistance in the Congress. And, unto his dying day, he professed his non-belief.
Still working on that, but definitely George Carlin will be on the list.
Sagan was also a good choice, as is Bertrand Russell, Spinoza, John Lennon for some of his lyrics is also a good choice. Einstein, I admire for his outspokenness at that time, but atheism or any real tenet was not really his focus. Carlin's wit was amazing, & he nailed it so often.
None are on a pedestal, tho I read many. Or, watch videos of them. Dawkins, Hitchens, Dennett, Harris (the Four Horsemen), Dillahunty, Shermer, Krauss (unfortunate tho that situation is right now), Silverman, Mills, Baker, Aron Ra, many YouTube "spokesmen", Godless Cranium, Professor Stick, Thunderfoot,...the list goes on. Don't know if I agree with every little thing some state, or everything they may actually do in life, but all have contributed something in the formation of my ideas, understanding & organization of my stance.
Amen to that....oops sorry Hear hear! lol
Albert Einstein for those who dispute it [en.wikipedia.org]
I hope Einstein's lack of faith wouldn't be questioned here, but you never know.
john lennon paul mcartney jim morrison castro hugo chavez evo morales gorbachov chris hadfield my uncle simon
Hitchens, Sagan, Carlin, Dawkins, Dillahunty, Harris. Many more also.
I have to always add Jerry DeWitt. He's the first graduate of the clergy progect and I found his videos on You Tube when I wasn't sure yet on the god issue. In just a short time I said "this man is me" and I knew I was atheist. It was only then that I knew what to call my lack of belief. Dan Barker gets more than an honable mention here. I like all these guys and more.
Thomas Paine, who was profoundly wise and forward-thinking. People of his time didn’t deserve him.
Love Paine but I think he was a deist.
@Fearlessfreep Thomas Paine was indeed a Deist. God or Nature‘s God or the uncaused cause ... whatever you want to call it, had established laws of the universe, made everything, and then went on to other things. No divine interactions, no churches, no religions, no prophets, no inspired writings or revealed wisdom, no miracles, no respect for any faith tradition… I can live with that!
It sure seemed like his deism was hanging by a thread. I give any deist the benefit of the doubt, if they existed in a time where they tortured and killed heathens and witches.
My first exposure to freethought was through the lecutres of Robert Green Ingersoll, and it was he who introduced me to my hero, Thomas Paine, the deist who eschewed all religions and who said, "My own mind is my own church," and who participated in two revolutions, thought slavery should have been eliminated in the Constitution, devised what we today call Social Security, designed an ingenious steel truss bridge, and who wrote Common Sense, The Crisis, The Rights of Man, Agrarian Justice and The Age of Reason. Thank you for asking this question.
I have no doubt that Paine would be an atheist if he were alive today. I love the de-conversion that’s shown in his writing from Common Sense to The Rights of Man to The Age of Reason.
Emma Goldman Author of Anarchism and other essays
Quotes
I'd rather have roses on my table than diamonds on my neck
If I can't dance I'm not coming to your revoution'
if Voting changed anything they'd make it illegal.
People have as much liberty as they have the intelligence to want, and they courage to take
Mine is Butterfly McQueen, one of the few prominent African American non believers we have. She is mostly known for her role in 'Gone With The Wind', and she had a number of other mostly racially stereotyped parts, that forced her to eventually give up acting. She once said, "As my ancestors are free from slavery, I am free from the slavery of religion".
Pedestal no, greatly value yes. There are many but these are the top (in no particular order):
Pat Condell for his acid wit
Matt Dillahunty for his mercilessness & plain-spoken bluntness
43 Alley for his disarming likeability & good/regular guy next door approach
Christopher Hitchens for his suavity & indignant outrage
Robert Ingersoll for his eloquence & warm sincerity
Carl Sagan for his broad perspective & intellectual rigor
Seth Andrews for his polished & well considered approach
Neil degrasse Tyson for his broad perspective & humor
quite a list
Where do I start...Christopher Hitchens, Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, Stephen Hawking, etc.