Not all religionists but quite al lot of you it seems to me really don't like secularism, why's that?
Please explain?
ippy
ippy, I think the problem can be attributed to a variety of misunderstandings.
Firstly, there is a well-known label for something that has nothing to do with secularism, really, Secular Humanism. Anyone brought up an any sort of literature will know of the likes of Asimov, Attwood, Bentham, Bronowski, Chomsky, A.C.Clarke, Russell, Sagan - etc., etc.. Those of us who are religious have no great problem with such folk, though we may disagree with some or all of their understandings of the world. They are all well-respected scholars/authors/... .
Secondly, there are those who shout about the importance of secularism, yet then espouse ideas that aren't secular. For instance, there those who argue that any second chamber of government should not only have NO CoE Bishops sitting in its midst, there should be NO (official) religious representation at all in such a place, when true secularism would have official representation from as wide a range of belief systems represented within the population as possible. Even you have done this at times; almost all your threads about secularism relate to the position of the Christian faith in society - few to other faiths and their influences.
To sum it up, secularism has almost as many meanings as it has adherents.