In an earlier post, I provided my considered opinion that the purpose of higher education is to develop high level cognitive skills in students which will enable them to work constructively at high levels in organisations. The subject studied to achieve development of these skills is irrelevant. The subject area is the context within which these skills can be developed.
What you think this context should be is not relevant. What is important is what the students themselves wish to study. The university's role then is to ensure that within this context high levels skills can be developed.
The fact that you have no interest in a particular subject or have objections to its existence and so would deny others the freedom to choose that subject is little short of totalitarian censorship. It reminds me a a story some years ago when some students in the USA were campaigning to end the study of the fiction of Dead White Europeans (generally, 0- English Literature).
What is substance?
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I know that I am making myself a hostage to fortune by identifying your orthographical errors, but are you not undermining your own argument by permitting your post to contain what might be considered to be examples of sloppy scholarship? You have my permission to comment on my spelling and grammar.
Edited to correct orthographical errors.
No I don't like this post of yours and I don't feel phased by it either.
I have, as I see it, good reasons for my point of view, presenting theology and divinity as subjects for study by our universities is a continuance of lending these subjects in particular, lending them far more importance than I feel is due to them.
We now live, whether you like it or not, in a country where less than a half of the current population follow any of these theistic beliefs and we've had centuries of having them pushed at us, placed on front foot most of the time, I want an end to theism having the front foot position, in the same way society here in the U K is demonstrating by the way they are directing their feet
Why you think I want to prevent these subjects being taught at uni?
Theology and divinity can come under an umbrella of philosophy, unlike things as they are at present where philosophy gets grouped in with those two ecclesiastical, magical, mystical superstitional based subjects and I don't see why philosophy sould be lending of it's dignity to theology and divinity any more, those days should be over.
I think we all understand the need for education to produce the next well rounded generation, that's something that understood easily even by those of us without a degree.
Any of the parts of theology or divinity that make sense can be taught along with philosophy, as opposed to dropping them, including the place they have played in our history.
Censorship? What's that all about?
I don't really want to get into semantics, I'll leave that to you, mind if you read something you don't want to understand.
ippy