Author Topic: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!  (Read 72684 times)

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #175 on: February 19, 2018, 07:22:05 PM »
I think he meant that 1945 - 1981 was the golden age. To be fair, I only really remember the last decade of that period and it was characterised for me by strikes, power cuts and the three day week.

Never mind though, we did win the World Cup.
Strikes or twenty four hour service from people who have to use foodbanks and have three jobs to subsidise higher education?

jeremyp

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #176 on: February 19, 2018, 07:28:56 PM »
Strikes or twenty four hour service from people who have to use foodbanks and have three jobs to subsidise higher education?

In the 70's only about 5% of people ever attended higher education establishments. People went hungry in your golden period too. The immediate post war period was a time of grinding poverty due to us being more or less bankrupt. Diseases of malnutrition were rife. Diseases generally were rife. You don't hear any more of people in Britain getting polio or small pox. Further afield there was malaria in southern Europe. Since the 1980's crime statistics have been on a generally downward trend. You couldn't get a decent coffee.
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SteveH

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #177 on: February 20, 2018, 10:24:06 AM »
The turn of the tide IMHO begins around 1981.
That's when things started to get worse.
Well, naturally - it was two years into that appalling woman's premiership. We are still, 28 years after she got booted out, feeling the bad effects of her time in office.
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Nearly Sane

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #178 on: February 20, 2018, 10:32:26 AM »
Well, naturally - it was two years into that appalling woman's premiership. We are still, 28 years after she got booted out, feeling the bad effects of her time in office.
So that would have been one Christian who DID make your skin crawl?

SteveH

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #179 on: February 20, 2018, 11:03:25 AM »
So that would have been one Christian who DID make your skin crawl?
I suppose so - if she was a sincere Christian when the cameras weren't on her.
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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #180 on: February 20, 2018, 11:11:30 AM »
I suppose so - if she was a sincere Christian when the cameras weren't on her.
While the 'Blessed Margaret' may have been many things, she didn't seem to be insincere, Her interpretation of the Good Samaritan seemed genuine, if a trifle materialistic

The Accountant, OBE, KC

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #181 on: February 20, 2018, 11:14:46 AM »
Gabriella,

Yes you do. The extent to which choice is unfettered is moot, and perhaps given enough time the C of E will disestablish, faith schools will end, bishops will cease to have automatic rights to the legislature, clerics will stop having their views broadcast automatically on matters of moral import etc. My point though was that these things are harder – not impossible as you imply I think - to achieve given how heavily the dice are loaded just now.
We're not talking about theoretical classical economics, we're talking real world where markets are not completely free and where people are influenced to consume all kinds of ideas by lots of different factors.

As I said if the consumer finds value in religion, they will buy. I am not implying anything is impossible - I am saying we live in a relatively free, democratic country and while consumers exist who derive value from religion, they will keep buying and they also may or may not keep privileging religious entities if they derive value from doing so. When they stop deriving value from religion those religious privileges will be revoked. Not sure why consumer behaviour is a difficult idea for you to grasp. Yes it is influenced by prevailing culture but that holds true for most goods and services, not just religion. 

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The day that Justin Welby’s views on, say, homosexuality are afforded the same privileges as Fred McBonker’s views on a flat earth though, then you’ll have a point.
Again that is up to consumers and a free press and social media to decide that they are no longer interested in Welby's pronouncements on a topic. In which case the media will stop broadcasting it. Right now, there is a perception that consumers are interested in what he has to say.

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Yes, but faith itself is the common underpinning for all those interpretations. “But that’s my faith” is the beginning end of the conversation, regardless of what the interpretations might happen to be. And that’s what I was actually talking about when you accused me of attempting to close down free speech. But you already knew that.
Oh I see - so your comment about me being a paid up member of faith that kills people for drawing cartoons of Prophet Mohamed was not trying to single out a particular faith and claim that killing people who draw cartoons was what every member of that faith signed up for? My mistake for thinking that was the kind of bigoted nonsensical rubbish argument you were trying to make. 

And no, your simplistic version of an imaginary conversation "it's my faith" is not the end of the conversation. Though I get that you have to keep repeating it as it's the nonsense that underpins your whole unconvincing argument. As a consumer who derives value from a faith and therefore keeps buying, the conversation is a lot more nuanced than "it's my faith". But you already knew that because it's been explained to you by me and others many times, but you choose to ignore it, either wilfully or because it is too difficult for you to grasp. You also already know that regardless of how many times you try to equate faith with criminal acts by religious 3rd parties, consumers are still going to keep buying religion because they derive value from it. 

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It’s not like that at all. Are there special schools to teach children the certain facts of Brexitism? Guaranteed places set aside in the legislature by right for those who would promote Brexit because that’s their “faith”? How about a slot for Brexiteers every morning on Radio 4 with no right to reply and no equal time for counter-argument perhaps? Or perhaps you think that leading Brexiteers are routinely consulted and have their views broadcast on matters that have nothing to do with Brexit, but on which they choose to pontificate in any case?

Can you see now how hopeless that analogy is?
Except it is not a hopeless analogy but you're welcome to think it is based on your skewed interpretation.

My point about Brexit is that it reflects the democratic will of the UK population with the information they took on board as part of their decision-making process. And yes there was a lot of faith in the idea that Britain would be great again if it could free itself politically and legislatively from the EU.                 

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Not even close – see above. You seem determined (wilfully perhaps?) to ignore the argument. Brexit (or fox hunting, or funding for the NHS, or whatever) are one thing. Privileging the views of those whose only argument is, “but that’s my faith” in all sorts areas of public life on the other hand is loading the dice.
As I said before, given that many people of faith have opposing views on many issues, including equal marriage, that's not their only argument. Some people's arguments hinge on whether or not they think individuals being free to live as they please is the type of society that benefits the most amount of people. It's not a difficult concept to grasp that some people do not like the way their society is changing because they feel it is in a worse state than it was before and therefore vote to limit other people's freedoms.     
           
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No.
So if I said LGBT rights or Pink News or Stonewall makes my skin crawl that would also be acceptable on the basis that you saying that Islam or Christianity makes your skin crawl is not actually targeting Muslim or Christian people?

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Isn’t that what you’ve been doing all along (while ignoring the actual argument about how free choice can be in a loaded game)?
No - calling people consumers is not arguing that people choose their beliefs. I am arguing that people buy religion based on their personal experience and belief that it adds value.

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But yes, people clearly do choose their beliefs if the remarkable changes to social attitudes to all sort of issues in the last few decades are anything to go by (equal marriage, gender rights etc). It’s mostly religions that lag behind, presumably because their supposedly inerrant “holy” texts can’t adapt.     

Clearly, despite having it explained to you many times now. If someone thinks that an inerrant god has decided that homosexuality is a “sin” because it says so in a “holy” book, how would you propose to argue against “but that’s my faith” exactly?
The same way lots of people of faith have looked at their holy book and decided that there could be a variety of interpretations of what's actually written in the text or what should be practised, given the circumstances and context of the time that the text was written.

More importantly, so what if someone who regards aspects of their own behaviour as a sin also regards someone else's behaviour as a sin? Last time I checked we are not policing people's beliefs, only their behaviour. The only issue is what is legal, and given that a faith view on sin no longer determines laws in this country, the idea of sin has little impact on the workings of Parliament. This has been explained to you many times before. Why is it so difficult for you to comprehend, given the evidence of equal marriage laws?

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It’s, “I know I’m right no matter what reasoning or evidence there may ever be” and the problem with it is, as you well know, faith. That’s a faith position and when its objects are very bad ideas, there’s no possibility ever of changing them (at least unless the person who holds them abandons his faith).

Why is this difficult to comprehend?
So presumably,  given all the reasoning and evidence presented to you, you are not holding a faith position that the conversation ends at "it's my faith". Nor are you holding the faith position that Parliamentary legislation is based on what is considered a sin from a faith perspective. Nor are you surprised that consumers who derive value from religion are hardly likely to give it up, regardless of your often repeated faith position that law-abiding religious people provide intellectual cover for religious criminals.
« Last Edit: February 20, 2018, 11:18:50 AM by Gabriella »
I identify as a Sword because I have abstract social constructs e.g. honour and patriotism. My preferred pronouns are "kill/ maim/ dismember"

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The Accountant, OBE, KC

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #182 on: February 20, 2018, 11:24:58 AM »
What a great pity it is then  that they have to spend all those years believing in a system that requires 100% faith.
You'll have to ask them if they consider it a pity or if they derived value from being part of their parents' traditions.

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Interpretations of words written by people wwho believed they were in contact with a god of some sort.
Yes. And yes I can see why that bothers you, given that the words have been used by people to rally armies to defend their land from invaders and also used to justify atrocities as well as benevolence.
I identify as a Sword because I have abstract social constructs e.g. honour and patriotism. My preferred pronouns are "kill/ maim/ dismember"

Quite handy with weapons - available for hire to defeat money laundering crooks around the world.

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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #183 on: February 20, 2018, 01:42:58 PM »
Gabriella,

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We're not talking about theoretical classical economics, we're talking real world where markets are not completely free and where people are influenced to consume all kinds of ideas by lots of different factors.

Which still misses the point that religion is so deeply embedded (by law even non-religious schools are supposed to have a “daily act of worship” for example) that our “real world” is a heavily rigged game. “Not completely free” is significantly to understate the issue.     

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As I said if the consumer finds value in religion, they will buy. I am not implying anything is impossible - I am saying we live in a relatively free, democratic country and while consumers exist who derive value from religion, they will keep buying and they also may or may not keep privileging religious entities if they derive value from doing so. When they stop deriving value from religion those religious privileges will be revoked. Not sure why consumer behaviour is a difficult idea for you to grasp. Yes it is influenced by prevailing culture but that holds true for most goods and services, not just religion.

You’re still missing it – see above. If religious faiths were private members’ clubs (think Flat Earth Society for example) how many “consumers” would “buy” them do you think? And if, like me, you think the number would be a very small proportion of those who “buy” them just now, what does that tell you about the importance of being so deeply embedded in the machinery of the societies in which they do OK? Do you really think that if, say, the C of E were stripped of its privileges and left to fight its corner on its arguments (a la Brexiteers etc) its numbers wouldn’t dwindle even further? How about if we did away with faith schools?         

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Again that is up to consumers and a free press and social media to decide that they are no longer interested in Welby's pronouncements on a topic. In which case the media will stop broadcasting it. Right now, there is a perception that consumers are interested in what he has to say.

See above. Why is there that “perception” do you think?

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Oh I see - so your comment about me being a paid up member of faith that kills people for drawing cartoons of Prophet Mohamed was not trying to single out a particular faith and claim that killing people who draw cartoons was what every member of that faith signed up for?

It’s simpler than that. Not only was I not trying to say it, I didn’t say that at all. By all means though if you think otherwise then try to show where I did say that "every member of that faith (had) signed up for". 

Oh, and you’ve completely missed the actual argument, namely that “faith” is the common underpinning, and that its objects and instructions are a secondary matter. Take away the “it’s inerrantly true because my faith tells me so” and only then can argument or reason have a role at all.     

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My mistake for thinking that was the kind of bigoted nonsensical rubbish argument you were trying to make.

Yes it was your mistake – see above.   

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And no, your simplistic version of an imaginary conversation "it's my faith" is not the end of the conversation. Though I get that you have to keep repeating it as it's the nonsense that underpins your whole unconvincing argument.

Throwing in “simplistic”, "unconvincing” etc doesn’t actually make an argument for any of those things being true. You do know that right?

If you believe these pejoratives to be true nonetheless, then you’d need actually to address the argument itself to make a case.

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As a consumer who derives value from a faith and therefore keeps buying, the conversation is a lot more nuanced than "it's my faith". But you already knew that because it's been explained to you by me and others many times, but you choose to ignore it, either wilfully or because it is too difficult for you to grasp.

Still missing it. I don’t doubt for one moment that you do “derive value” from your faith. Good for you. That though has nothing to do with the point, namely that those who would make objective claims of fact about the world “because that’s my faith” are in not even wrong territory. You’re free to feel as warm and loved up as you like about your various beliefs – what you can’t expect though is to have the attendant claims of fact (”God is” etc) privileged over just guessing because they happen to be your faith beliefs.

It’s simple enough I’d have thought, so why keep avoiding what’s actually being said?   

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You also already know that regardless of how many times you try to equate faith with criminal acts by religious 3rd parties, consumers are still going to keep buying religion because they derive value from it.

What “3rd parties” would they be?

Anyway, as you’ve just continued with the same irrelevance as above I’ll leave it be I think.   

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Except it is not a hopeless analogy but you're welcome to think it is based on your skewed interpretation.

Again just using pejoratives in the hope no-one notices that you have no arguments to validate them isn’t helping you. It’s a hopeless analogy because people arguing for Brexit have none of the privileges I mentioned that religion has, and nor do Brexiteers claim inerrant certainty on the basis of their "faith" – QED. 

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My point about Brexit is that it reflects the democratic will of the UK population with the information they took on board as part of their decision-making process. And yes there was a lot of faith in the idea that Britain would be great again if it could free itself politically and legislatively from the EU.

Then it continues to be a bad point for the reasons I've explained.

First, you’re conflating the religious use of “faith” (ie, as an epistemologically valid tool) with the political one (ie, as trusting to luck when the evidence and argument cease).

Second, yet again you’re just ignoring the massive access by right that religion has to the instruments of state and of society more generally that other polemical positions don’t have. Why do you think you have such a blind spot about this?                       

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As I said before, given that many people of faith have opposing views on many issues, including equal marriage, that's not their only argument. Some people's arguments hinge on whether or not they think individuals being free to live as they please is the type of society that benefits the most amount of people. It's not a difficult concept to grasp that some people do not like the way their society is changing because they feel it is in a worse state than it was before and therefore vote to limit other people's freedoms.

Nope again. Of course “people of faith” will have opposing views on many issues – that’s the thing with “holy” texts: you can often take from them whatever suits you best. The point though is that what they generally have in common is the notion that personal faith is more reliable than just guessing - much more in fact as it's inerrantly correct - and that they behave accordingly.

Why not actually address that rather than dance around it?
           
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So if I said LGBT rights or Pink News or Stonewall makes my skin crawl that would also be acceptable on the basis that you saying that Islam or Christianity makes your skin crawl is not actually targeting Muslim or Christian people?

It’s “acceptable” inasmuch as I’d defend your right to say it (and to say pretty much anything else), yes. I think you’d be wrong to say these things though, and I also think you should afford me the same courtesy that I show you by defending my right to say why I think you’d be wrong. (And if my right to free speech happens to be drawing a cartoon of someone you think to be a prophet by the way, then so be it).

The point though is that my skin would only crawl (for want of a better term) if you also said, “and I know beyond any possible counter-argument that I’m right about that because my faith tells me so.” Why? Because then you’d have put yourself beyond any meaningful dialogue so my only response could be, “so ****ing what?”   

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No - calling people consumers is not arguing that people choose their beliefs. I am arguing that people buy religion based on their personal experience and belief that it adds value.

And its deeply embedded nature makes no difference to the buy-in rate do you think?

Seriously though?

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The same way lots of people of faith have looked at their holy book and decided that there could be a variety of interpretations of what's actually written in the text or what should be practised, given the circumstances and context of the time that the text was written.

But if you think these texts are just early attempts at moral philosophy, what role is there then for “faith”?

Look, you can’t have it both ways: either you think these texts to be the inerrant words of a god because that's your faith, or you think they’re reflective of the mores of the times of their authors but no more certain in their content than, say, the works of Plato.

Which is it?     

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More importantly, so what if someone who regards aspects of their own behaviour as a sin also regards someone else's behaviour as a sin? Last time I checked we are not policing people's beliefs, only their behaviour. The only issue is what is legal, and given that a faith view on sin no longer determines laws in this country, the idea of sin has little impact on the workings of Parliament. This has been explained to you many times before. Why is it so difficult for you to comprehend, given the evidence of equal marriage laws?

Oh dear. Of course people are free to think whatever they like. If someone thinks though that, say, homosexuality is a “sin” because his faith tells him so then on what basis could he be persuaded that his God’s word on that issue is wrong? And if that person happens to be, say, a senior cleric whose views are treated seriously in the pubic square (schools, legislature, education, media etc) then how on earth do you think the added credibility that gives him doesn’t bias the public debate, the Zeitgeist if you will more than, say, the views of the head of the Flat Earth Society?

Incidentally, the “laws in this country” are much more influenced by religion than you might think. We still have clerics taking seats by right in the House of Lords, we still have statutes that favour religion (the legal obligation for mandatory daily acts of worship in schools for example), we still have the RC church telling RC MPs how they should vote on certain issues, we still have exemptions for churches from various equality laws etc. Don’t kid yourself that this stuff is all history.         

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So presumably,  given all the reasoning and evidence presented to you, you are not holding a faith position that the conversation ends at "it's my faith".

It’s not a “faith position”, it’s an evidence position. “But that’s my faith” is routinely used by theists as an epistemic justification for their views. What counter-argument to that even conceptually do you think there could be? 

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Nor are you holding the faith position that Parliamentary legislation is based on what is considered a sin from a faith perspective.

No I’m not. I’m holding an evidence position about that – see above.

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Nor are you surprised that consumers who derive value from religion are hardly likely to give it up, regardless of your often repeated faith position that law-abiding religious people provide intellectual cover for religious criminals.

First, (again) “deriving value” and making objective, “true for you too”, claims of fact about the world are not the same thing at all. We’re talking about religion here, not yoga.

Second, I’m not surprised for the reasons I keep explaining and you keep ignoring.

Third, think of smoking as an analogy: lots of people “derive value” from it and there’s no great public will to outlaw it entirely. It’s still to a significant extent woven into the fabric of society and so is still substantially normalised. Now imagine there was no such thing as cigarettes, and someone invented them tomorrow. Knowing what we know now, do you really thing there’d be anything like the buy-in for them that there is just now?

No? Why not?

Now imagine too that FOREST (the smokers' lobby group) had the sort of access to every aspect of society that religion has. How many buyers would there be then do you think?

Now imagine too that we lived in a country where the arguments from ASH (the anti-smoking people) were called "blasphemous", they were locked up (or worse) etc. How many more smokers would there be then do you think?

Is any of this sinking in yet?

Anything at all?       
« Last Edit: February 20, 2018, 02:32:08 PM by bluehillside Retd. »
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SusanDoris

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #184 on: February 20, 2018, 03:42:16 PM »
That was a most interesting post. I noted that gabriella missed the point when responding to my short post too.

Between 12:30 and 1:0 pm. I listened to a discussion on Radio Five Live, very well chaired, between two men, one a rabbi , the other an academic and, I think, a humanist, about circumcision and the change in Icelandic law. I do not raise this in order to bring that subject up again - it has been talked of quite enough - but because the Rabbi (or whoever he was) would not see the main point about faith being his only totally based on *God's words* justification. I didn't have time to phone or e-mail my views about his bigoted arguments.
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Humph Warden Bennett

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #185 on: February 20, 2018, 03:52:14 PM »
That was a most interesting post. I noted that gabriella missed the point when responding to my short post too.

Between 12:30 and 1:0 pm. I listened to a discussion on Radio Five Live, very well chaired, between two men, one a rabbi , the other an academic and, I think, a humanist, about circumcision and the change in Icelandic law. I do not raise this in order to bring that subject up again - it has been talked of quite enough - but because the Rabbi (or whoever he was) would not see the main point about faith being his only totally based on *God's words* justification. I didn't have time to phone or e-mail my views about his bigoted arguments.

Naughty naughty.

You think that the Rabbi is worse than the Imam who wants children's genitals cut at thirteen?

The Accountant, OBE, KC

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #186 on: February 20, 2018, 03:54:17 PM »
Gabriella,

Which still misses the point that religion is so deeply embedded (by law even non-religious schools are supposed to have a “daily act of worship” for example) that our “real world” is a heavily rigged game. “Not completely free” is significantly to understate the issue.
No - not missing the point - what I am hearing from my kids is that most of their friends can't stand assembly, including my own kids, if it includes any type of act of worship and this included when they were in year 5 and 6 in Primary School. What I am hearing about is Catholics having abortions and using contraception. So however it's "rigged" it doesn't seem to be working to recruit more children into religion or into a particular mindset. I don't see the problem in me expecting people to be less and less influenced by the CofE.

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You’re still missing it – see above. If religious faiths were private members’ clubs (think Flat Earth Society for example) how many “consumers” would “buy” them do you think? And if, like me, you think the number would be a very small proportion of those who “buy” them just now, what does that tell you about the importance of being so deeply embedded in the machinery of the societies in which they do OK? Do you really think that if, say, the C of E were stripped of its privileges and left to fight its corner on its arguments (a la Brexiteers etc) its numbers wouldn’t dwindle even further? How about if we did away with faith schools?
My experience is that I went from atheist to Muslim, without experiencing faith schools or mosques. Any influence the Church of England and acts of worship at school had on me was to push me towards atheism, along with parents wanting me to go with them to the temple. I know atheists who choose to send their children to faith schools because they are good schools, compared to the non-faith schools in their area. I don't think it is right to prevent a child from having choice and a chance to have a good education just because the education is provided by a faith school and you have a philosophical problem with the concept of faith.     

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See above. Why is there that “perception” do you think?
Because the public has not sought in sufficient numbers to abolish the position of Archbishop of Canterbury

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It’s simpler than that. Not only was I not trying to say it, I didn’t say that at all. By all means though if you think otherwise then try to show where I did say that "every member of that faith (had) signed up for".
Stop trying to weasel your way out of it. You said "This from a paid up member of a faith that embraces killing people for drawing cartoons of its “prophet”? ". If you are arguing that there is "a faith" and that the faith "embraces killing people for drawing cartoons of its prophet" and I am a paid up member of a single faith, then as a "paid up member" of this faith I must be embracing killing people for drawing cartoons. You deliberately picked your words - but of course you're not a bigot. My mistake - well done you for clarifying that.   

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Oh, and you’ve completely missed the actual argument, namely that “faith” is the common underpinning, and that its objects and instructions are a secondary matter. Take away the “it’s inerrantly true because my faith tells me so” and only then can argument or reason have a role at all.
So your point is that you have a problem with people believing in God as a matter of faith? The objects and instructions are a secondary matter. And all this time I thought you had a problem with the object and instructions and their effects on society - all that stuff you wrote about equal marriage, contraception and abortion was just a diversion     

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Yes it was your mistake – see above.
Of course it was.

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Throwing in “simplistic”, "unconvincing” etc doesn’t actually make an argument for any of those things being true. You do know that right?

If you believe these pejoratives to be true nonetheless, then you’d need actually to address the argument itself to make a case.
You are simply making the claim that religious people begin and end their argument with "it's my faith". It's up to you to justify your claim if you want your claim to be taken seriously. Given there are lots of religious people who don't make the argument "it's my faith"  - I believe I pointed out to you before that Bin Laden came up with a whole list of political reasons for organising 9/11 - I don't need to address an argument if it hasn't been made.   

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Still missing it. I don’t doubt for one moment that you do “derive value” from your faith. Good for you. That though has nothing to do with the point, namely that those who would make objective claims of fact about the world “because that’s my faith” are in not even wrong territory. You’re free to feel as warm and loved up as you like about your various beliefs – what you can’t expect though is to have the attendant claims of fact (”God is” etc) privileged over just guessing because they happen to be your faith beliefs.
See above on the privilege issue and yes I can expect it, it's up to society as to whether my expectation will be met.

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What “3rd parties” would they be?

Anyway, as you’ve just continued with the same irrelevance as above I’ll leave it be I think.
3rd parties would be criminals.

But ok, next time you come up with your nonsensical claim of law-abiding citizens providing "intellectual cover" for extremists, we'll come back to the issue of 3rd parties.   

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Again just using pejoratives in the hope no-one notices that you have no arguments to validate them isn’t helping you.

It’s a hopeless analogy because people arguing for Brexit have none of the privileges I mentioned that religion has, and nor do Brexiteers claim inerrant certainty on the basis of their "faith" – QED.
No it isn't. I have already covered the point about privilege above - it's not preventing the CofE losing more and more public support. The Brexiteers I have heard on LBC do claim inerrant certainty on the basis of their beliefs - they are certain they are right about all kinds of issues relating to immigration and EU laws and certain that the Remainers and experts are wrong. You claiming I haven't addressed the argument in the hope that no-one notices that you have made some unsupported claims isn't helping you. 

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Then it continues to be a bad point for the reasons I've explained.
No it doesn't for the reasons I have explained.

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First, you’re conflating the religious use of “faith” (ie, as an epistemologically valid tool) with the political one (ie, as trusting to luck when the evidence and argument cease).
Nope - you are claiming that this is the way the religious use the word "faith" - I am pointing out that it isn't.

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Second, yet again you’re just ignoring the massive access by right that religion has to the instruments of state and of society more generally that other polemical positions don’t have. Why do you think you have such a blind spot about this?
You do realise that you calling it "a blind spot" doesn't undo the argument that any access they have isn't translated into increasing numbers flocking to the CofE, quite the opposite in fact, so there is nothing preventing the privilege being revoked by public will, much like the public revoked our EU membership.

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Nope again. Of course “people of faith” will have opposing views on many issues – that’s the thing with “holy” texts: you can often take from them whatever suits you best. The point though is that what they generally have in common is the notion that personal faith is more reliable than just guessing - much more in fact as it's inerrantly correct - and that they behave accordingly.

Why not actually address that rather than dance around it?
Addressed above so I won't address it again. You do realise that claiming that I am dancing around it, doesn't actually make your claim true. 
           
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It’s “acceptable” inasmuch as I’d defend your right to say it (and to say pretty much anything else), yes. I think you’d be wrong to say these things though, and I also think you should afford me the same courtesy that I show you by defending my right to say why I think you’d be wrong. (And if my right to free speech happens to be drawing a cartoon of someone you think to be a prophet by the way, then so be it).
Given that I support free speech, of course you have a right to say why you think I would be wrong about anything I said or to draw cartoons.

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The point though is that my skin would only crawl (for want of a better term) if you also said, “and I know beyond any possible counter-argument that I’m right about that because my faith tells me so.” Why? Because then you’d have put yourself beyond any meaningful dialogue so my only response could be, “so ****ing what?”
In other words someone saying "I know God exists because my faith tells me so" makes your skin crawl. Fair enough. We're all different about what makes our skin crawl.

It doesn't make my skin crawl if someone said “and I know beyond any possible counter-argument that unicorns exist because my faith tells me so.”

I'd think they were a bit strange - the same way I thought religious people were strange to believe in God but no, it doesn't make my skin crawl.

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And its deeply embedded nature makes no difference to the buy-in rate do you think?

Seriously though?
I already covered this above.

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But if you think these texts are just early attempts at moral philosophy, what role is there then for “faith”?

Look, you can’t have it both ways: either you think these texts to be the inerrant words of a god because that's your faith, or you think they’re reflective of the mores of the times of their authors but no more certain in their content than, say, the works of Plato.

Which is it?
We already did this argument on any other threads. My position hasn't changed. I can only speak about the Quran, as that's what I'm familiar with. Humans interpreting text will make mistakes and the text is ambiguous in may areas rather than specific as the detail would have to be fleshed out by man-made laws and debated by each society that chooses to find meaning in the message in the Quran.

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Oh dear. Of course people are free to think whatever they like. If someone thinks though that, say, homosexuality is a “sin” because his faith tells him so then on what basis could he be persuaded that his God’s word on that issue is wrong? And if that person happens to be, say, a senior cleric whose views are treated seriously in the pubic square (schools, legislature, education, media etc) then how on earth do you think the added credibility that gives him doesn’t bias the public debate, the Zeitgeist if you will more than, say, the views of the head of the Flat Earth Society?
I think people use intuition and emotions such as compassion and empathy as well as reasoning such as the text related to different circumstances to arrive at their conclusions.

Lots of factors influence the debate. Any influence a senior cleric has is easily counter-balanced by alternative arguments and the emotional pressure from people feeling empathy for the "sinner". Why don't you back up your claim by linking me to examples of how this bias is preventing change that the public wants, given the drop in religion in the UK population. 

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Incidentally, the “laws in this country” are much more influenced by religion than you might think. We still have clerics taking seats by right in the House of Lords, we still have statutes that favour religion (the legal obligation for mandatory daily acts of worship in schools for example), we still have the RC church telling RC MPs how they should vote on certain issues, we still have exemptions for churches from various equality laws etc. Don’t kid yourself that this stuff is all history.
Ok but how have these clerics and the act of worship in schools prevented the democratic will of the people? Any specific examples I can look at?         

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It’s not a “faith position”, it’s an evidence position. “But that’s my faith” is routinely used by theists as an epistemic justification for their views. What counter-argument to that even conceptually do you think there could be?
Are we still talking about a belief in God? In which case who cares if someone believes something exists based on faith. If it is not about the existence of God, then as far as I am aware theists come up with more to support their view than “But that’s my faith”.

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No I’m not. I’m holding an evidence position about that – see above.
What evidence is there that supports your claim of  "intellectual cover" provided by religious people?

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First, (again) “deriving value” and making objective, “true for you too”, claims of fact about the world are not the same thing at all. We’re talking about religion here, not yoga.

Second, I’m not surprised for the reasons I keep explaining and you keep ignoring.

Third, think of smoking as an analogy: lots of people “derive value” from it and there’s no great public attitude to outlaw it entirely. It’s still to a significant extent woven into the fabric of society and so is still substantially normalised. Now imagine there was no such thing as cigarettes, and someone invented them tomorrow. Knowing what we know now, do you really thing there’d be anything like the buy-in for them that there is just now?

No? Why not?

Now imagine too that FOREST (the smokers' lobby group) had the sort of access to every aspect of society that religion has. How many buyers would there be then do you think?

Now imagine too that we lived in a country where the arguments from ASH (the anti-smoking people) were called "blasphemous", they were locked up (or worse) etc. How many more smokers would there be then do you think?

Is any of this sinking in yet?

Anything at all?       
I was an atheist who became a Muslim so yes I think there would be buy-in if people invented religion now, despite everything we know. Lots of people find alternatives to religion in the current culture and allow those alternatives to have a huge influence and control over their lives.

Who in the UK is being locked up for blasphemy for opposing religion?
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SusanDoris

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #187 on: February 20, 2018, 03:55:43 PM »
Naughty naughty.

You think that the Rabbi is worse than the Imam who wants children's genitals cut at thirteen?
I'm not sure why you think I would infer that - I did not catch the beginning so probably missed something.
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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #188 on: February 20, 2018, 04:38:01 PM »
Hi Susan,

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That was a most interesting post. I noted that gabriella missed the point when responding to my short post too.

Between 12:30 and 1:0 pm. I listened to a discussion on Radio Five Live, very well chaired, between two men, one a rabbi , the other an academic and, I think, a humanist, about circumcision and the change in Icelandic law. I do not raise this in order to bring that subject up again - it has been talked of quite enough - but because the Rabbi (or whoever he was) would not see the main point about faith being his only totally based on *God's words* justification. I didn't have time to phone or e-mail my views about his bigoted arguments.

Thanks for the tip-off.

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #189 on: February 20, 2018, 05:34:15 PM »
I know atheists who choose to send their children to faith schools because they are good schools, compared to the non-faith schools in their area.
Anecdote a go go.

Guess what I know active churchgoers who choose to send their children to non-faith schools because they are good schools, compared to the faith schools in their area.

However I have never seen any actually verifiable quantitative data that indicates that faith schools are more popular than no faith schools despite the clear implication of those who use anecdotes as if it were strong evidence.

The reality is quite the reverse - it is the non faith schools that are more popular in terms of applications per place received compared to faith schools. Quite startlingly so in my area which isn't particularly unusual in any way.

So on latest application data of schools in my area:

Of the 9 secondary schools, there isn't even crossover - the 6 most popular are all non faith, the 3 least popular are faith. The non faith schools are receiving over double the number of applications per place compared to the faith schools.

Effectively the same on primary. There are 23 primary schools with non faith schools receiving double the number of applications per place compared to the faith schools. The most popular faith school is ranked 11th, the other 4 hold 4 of the 6 bottom positions.

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #190 on: February 20, 2018, 06:04:30 PM »
Anecdote a go go.

Guess what I know active churchgoers who choose to send their children to non-faith schools because they are good schools, compared to the faith schools in their area.

However I have never seen any actually verifiable quantitative data that indicates that faith schools are more popular than no faith schools despite the clear implication of those who use anecdotes as if it were strong evidence.

The reality is quite the reverse - it is the non faith schools that are more popular in terms of applications per place received compared to faith schools. Quite startlingly so in my area which isn't particularly unusual in any way.

So on latest application data of schools in my area:

Of the 9 secondary schools, there isn't even crossover - the 6 most popular are all non faith, the 3 least popular are faith. The non faith schools are receiving over double the number of applications per place compared to the faith schools.

Effectively the same on primary. There are 23 primary schools with non faith schools receiving double the number of applications per place compared to the faith schools. The most popular faith school is ranked 11th, the other 4 hold 4 of the 6 bottom positions.
All very interesting. Do you have a link to verify that or was that an anecdote?

Also, do you have any evidence that I have used an anecdote as strong evidence as opposed to using it as nothing more than an anecdote?

And what did you think I was using it as strong evidence of? The only point I made was that the existence of faith schools provide more options and choices and some atheist parents in a particular area chose to send their children to a faith school in that area because they thought it was better than the local non-faith schools.
« Last Edit: February 20, 2018, 06:53:59 PM by Gabriella »
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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #191 on: February 20, 2018, 07:21:20 PM »
Gabriella,

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No - not missing the point - what I am hearing from my kids is that most of their friends can't stand assembly, including my own kids, if it includes any type of act of worship and this included when they were in year 5 and 6 in Primary School. What I am hearing about is Catholics having abortions and using contraception. So however it's "rigged" it doesn't seem to be working to recruit more children into religion or into a particular mindset. I don't see the problem in me expecting people to be less and less influenced by the CofE.

Anecdotes do not constitute data. It’s clearly the case that those immersed in religion as children are more likely to be religious adults than those who are not. Multiple sources (legislature, education, media etc) all contribute to that to varying degrees.

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My experience is that I went from atheist to Muslim, without experiencing faith schools or mosques. Any influence the Church of England and acts of worship at school had on me was to push me towards atheism, along with parents wanting me to go with them to the temple. I know atheists who choose to send their children to faith schools because they are good schools, compared to the non-faith schools in their area. I don't think it is right to prevent a child from having choice and a chance to have a good education just because the education is provided by a faith school and you have a philosophical problem with the concept of faith.

Again, anecdotes do not constitute data. You’re also setting up a false binary there: religious education good; secular education bad.

Oh, and surely “preventing a child from having a choice” is what happens when the parent insists on a faith school isn’t it? Why not wait until she’s 18 when she can make up her own mind? Would you be as sanguine about parents sending their kids to, say, Marxist-Leninist schools (if there were such a thing)? Why not?     

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Because the public has not sought in sufficient numbers to abolish the position of Archbishop of Canterbury

Because…?

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Stop trying to weasel your way out of it. You said "This from a paid up member of a faith that embraces killing people for drawing cartoons of its “prophet”? ". If you are arguing that there is "a faith" and that the faith "embraces killing people for drawing cartoons of its prophet" and I am a paid up member of a single faith, then as a "paid up member" of this faith I must be embracing killing people for drawing cartoons. You deliberately picked your words - but of course you're not a bigot. My mistake - well done you for clarifying that.

Nice use of the non sequitur there. What I actually said was, “This from a paid up member of a faith that embraces killing people for drawing cartoons of its “prophet”?” (in response to a comment you’d made about free speech by the way). That, “then as a "paid up member" of this faith I must be embracing killing people for drawing cartoons” though is an invention all of your own.

You do this often by the way. I carefully refer to “some” Muslims (or whatever) and you reply with a, “so you think all Muslims…” etc. It’s your choice, but it does you no credit.     
   
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So your point is that you have a problem with people believing in God as a matter of faith? The objects and instructions are a secondary matter. And all this time I thought you had a problem with the object and instructions and their effects on society - all that stuff you wrote about equal marriage, contraception and abortion was just a diversion

Oh dear. Why are you doing this to yourself? The point was that “faith” is the common underpinning to certainty, that thinking faith is an epistemically valid method is bad thinking, and that so therefore acting on it accordingly is a bad idea. What those acts happen to entail (gay rights, gender equality etc) is a secondary matter.

You’re struggling with the difference between principle and content here.       

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Of course it was.

Yes it was.

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You are simply making the claim that religious people begin and end their argument with "it's my faith". It's up to you to justify your claim if you want your claim to be taken seriously. Given there are lots of religious people who don't make the argument "it's my faith"  - I believe I pointed out to you before that Bin Laden came up with a whole list of political reasons for organising 9/11 - I don't need to address an argument if it hasn't been made.

Please try to keep up. When people think their actions are validated by “holy” texts then they’re acting on faith. If there was reason or logic or evidence or anything instead to support them then the faith bit would be redundant. And when those people make claims of objective fact about the world – “God is” for example – then faith is all they have. That’s why in those cases faith is the beginning and the end of the matter.       

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See above on the privilege issue and yes I can expect it, it's up to society as to whether my expectation will be met.

See above for my falsification of it. I might expect to be carried around in a sedan chair while Felicity Kendall feeds me grapes, but that’s not the point is it.

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3rd parties would be criminals.

But ok, next time you come up with your nonsensical claim of law-abiding citizens providing "intellectual cover" for extremists, we'll come back to the issue of 3rd parties.

Again – using pejoratives like “nonsensical” with no attempt to argue them just makes you look out of your depth. When authority figures have their views privileged in the main offices of state and society, in what way do they not provide intellectual cover for those who would go just that bit further? Think of the rise of the far right in the US if that helps, emboldened as they are by their President to think, “Hey, you know what? Maybe my racism isn’t so bad after all”.

Fancy beating up a gay man on the street tonight? Well. If those clerics I keep seeing on the telly think they’re “sinful”, an “issue” etc then maybe it’s not such a big leap to violence after all.

Possibly you missed the extreme members of your faith recently cheer led by their imams into throwing gay men off tall buildings? Would they have been quite so emboldened do you think if instead those imams had told them that those acts were despicable?

Seriously though?         

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No it isn't. I have already covered the point about privilege above - it's not preventing the CofE losing more and more public support.

So? The point rather is that it’s the best way they can think of at least to try to slow the process down. If not, why bother with religiously segregated schools for primary age children (primary age children!) at all? Not for nothing do the Jesuits say, “Give me the child until seven and I’ll give you the man.” 

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The Brexiteers I have heard on LBC do claim inerrant certainty on the basis of their beliefs - they are certain they are right about all kinds of issues relating to immigration and EU laws and certain that the Remainers and experts are wrong.

Don’t be silly. Find me one who doesn’t also say, “but if the facts or evidence changed than I’d have to change my mind”. Now find me a cleric who says that about “God”.  You’re just dicking around with the ambiguity in the word “faith” here.

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You claiming I haven't addressed the argument in the hope that no-one notices that you have made some unsupported claims isn't helping you.

You’re bordering on dishonesty here. Suggest you read through what’s actually been said from both sides.   

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No it doesn't for the reasons I have explained.

You’ve explained nothing. Getting you to address an argument that’s actually been made is like trying to push fog through a keyhole.

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Nope - you are claiming that this is the way the religious use the word "faith" - I am pointing out that it isn't.

You’re not “pointing it out”, you’re asserting it – wrongly so as it happens. Take the statement “God is” – in what way is that not entirely a faith statement? What counter-arguments even conceptually could be used against it?   

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You do realise that you calling it "a blind spot" doesn't undo the argument that any access they have isn't translated into increasing numbers flocking to the CofE, quite the opposite in fact, so there is nothing preventing the privilege being revoked by public will, much like the public revoked our EU membership.

You do realise that that’s just the same irrelevance you tried before repeated? Why would people “not flocking” to them address the issue that they still have many more adherents and recruits than they would if they were just a private members’ club? That secular societies may be increasingly able to see through their claims doesn’t change that one jot.

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Addressed above so I won't address it again. You do realise that claiming that I am dancing around it, doesn't actually make your claim true.

Making unqualified and un-argued assertions isn’t addressing something, as I suspect deep down you know. 
           
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Given that I support free speech, of course you have a right to say why you think I would be wrong about anything I said or to draw cartoons.

Given that I support free speech too, perhaps you’d be good enough to stop accusing me of trying to stifle it when I argue that sometimes the weight given to some speakers is unsupportable, and that their faith-based claims of fact are epistemically worthless. 

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In other words someone saying "I know God exists because my faith tells me so" makes your skin crawl. Fair enough. We're all different about what makes our skin crawl.

Actually as a general principle yes it does. It’s what that certainty represents that troubles me – if you think it’s valid in one area that’s relatively harmless, how would you argue against it in areas that are anything but? It’s the privileging of faith over guessing as a general principle rather than its objects on a case-by-case basis that’s the problem.   

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It doesn't make my skin crawl if someone said “and I know beyond any possible counter-argument that unicorns exist because my faith tells me so.”

The issue isn’t about unicorns. Or gods. It’s about faith and certainty as a general principle. For some reason I can never get you to address this; you prefer instead endlessly to dive down rabbit holes of specific examples of what that certainty might concern. Why? 

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I'd think they were a bit strange - the same way I thought religious people were strange to believe in God but no, it doesn't make my skin crawl.

See above.

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I already covered this above.

No you didn’t. You just argued that it wasn’t particularly effective given the dwindling numbers. You didn’t though address the relevant issue of the difference between membership of a deeply embedded church and of a private members’ club.

Why not?   

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We already did this argument on any other threads. My position hasn't changed. I can only speak about the Quran, as that's what I'm familiar with. Humans interpreting text will make mistakes and the text is ambiguous in may areas rather than specific as the detail would have to be fleshed out by man-made laws and debated by each society that chooses to find meaning in the message in the Quran.

But you still (presumably) think the Quran contains inerrant facts. And presumably too you think that there are correct and incorrect interpretations of those facts. And if instead you think that all is interpretation, then what use have you for a supposed inerrant text in the first place when we’d have no way to know for sure its true meaning?   

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I think people use intuition and emotions such as compassion and empathy as well as reasoning such as the text related to different circumstances to arrive at their conclusions.

Lots of factors influence the debate. Any influence a senior cleric has is easily counter-balanced by alternative arguments and the emotional pressure from people feeling empathy for the "sinner". Why don't you back up your claim by linking me to examples of how this bias is preventing change that the public wants, given the drop in religion in the UK population.

Stop avoiding. I’m asking you whether you think that authority figures whose opinions are afforded special status in all the main institutions of public discourse are likely to be more successful (or less unsuccessful, it doesn’t matter which) than they would be if they were just the heads of private members’ clubs.

It’d be good if you’d stop ducking and diving around this and just benefit us with a simple yes or no.       

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Ok but how have these clerics and the act of worship in schools prevented the democratic will of the people? Any specific examples I can look at?

Wrong question. It’s not that they “prevent the democratic will of the people” at all; its that the democratic will of the people is to a significant degree determined in the first place by the influences upon it – legal, educational, media, whatever.

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Are we still talking about a belief in God? In which case who cares if someone believes something exists based on faith. If it is not about the existence of God, then as far as I am aware theists come up with more to support their view than “But that’s my faith”.

Actually often they don’t – they’ll quote Leviticus to validate their homophobia for example – but that’s not the point in any case. Again, you’re confusing the object of a belief (god, homosexuality = sinful etc) with the principle of faith as a rationale for it.

Would it kill you finally actually to address that?     

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What evidence is there that supports your claim of  "intellectual cover" provided by religious people?

Seriously? You want me to find a court case when the homophobic thug used as his defence, “It was that Justin Welby wot made me do it”? Seriously though? We're talking about a phenomenon here – and a well documented one when those in authority embolden the societies they influence or control. Do you think that those fanatics would have thrown gay men off buildings without religious authority, that the Germans would have become Jew-haters without the nazis in charge? 

Seriously though?   

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I was an atheist who became a Muslim so yes I think there would be buy-in if people invented religion now, despite everything we know. Lots of people find alternatives to religion in the current culture and allow those alternatives to have a huge influence and control over their lives.

If you give me your address I’ll arrange to have an, “Anecdote ≠ data” T-shirt sent to you in reverse writing so you can be reminded of it every time you clean your teeth.   

And finally, your:

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Who in the UK is being locked up for blasphemy for opposing religion?”

Was in response to my:

“Now imagine too that we lived in a country where the arguments from ASH (the anti-smoking people) were called "blasphemous", they were locked up (or worse) etc. How many more smokers would there be then do you think?” (emphasis added)

Why do you do this kind of thing?
« Last Edit: February 20, 2018, 07:29:08 PM by bluehillside Retd. »
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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #192 on: February 20, 2018, 07:23:58 PM »
I have to say I am struggling with the analogy the religion is like smoking? Surely as covered earlier we created religion with no outside choice, it isn't like a drug, it is part of us?

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #193 on: February 20, 2018, 07:34:55 PM »
NS,

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I have to say I am struggling with the analogy the religion is like smoking? Surely as covered earlier we created religion with no outside choice, it isn't like a drug, it is part of us?

It was analogous only to Gabriella's implication that finding value in something somehow related to its truth, and to the more general point that deeply embedded phenomena are more difficult for societies to shake off than would be the case if they'd been invented yesterday.   
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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #194 on: February 20, 2018, 07:36:33 PM »
NS,

It was analogous only to Gabriella's implication that finding value in something somehow related to its truth, and to the more general point that deeply embedded phenomena are more difficult for societies to shake off than would be the case if they'd been invented yesterday.

So it's analogous in an uninteresting and pointless way to the discussion.

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #195 on: February 20, 2018, 07:47:14 PM »
Well, naturally - it was two years into that appalling woman's premiership. We are still, 28 years after she got booted out, feeling the bad effects of her time in office.
What bad effects of the Thatcher era are we still feeling?
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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #196 on: February 20, 2018, 07:49:25 PM »
What bad effects of the Thatcher era are we still feeling?
and are we feeling any good effects?

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #197 on: February 20, 2018, 09:25:18 PM »
NS,

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So it's analogous in an uninteresting and pointless way to the discussion.

Well clearly I didn’t think so, which is why I said it. You are though entitled to your opinion.

Speaking of uninteresting and pointless though do you intend to continue your current stance of hair-splitting and sniping from the wings, or do you fancy contributing again something that’s neither uninteresting nor pointless? I’m long in the tooth enough to remember when you did make positive contributions to discussions here and I quite miss it.   
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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #198 on: February 20, 2018, 09:28:14 PM »
NS,

Well clearly I didn’t think so, which is why I said it. You are though entitled to your opinion.

Speaking of uninteresting and pointless though do you intend to continue your current stance of hair-splitting and sniping from the wings, or do you fancy contributing again something that’s neither uninteresting nor pointless? I’m long in the tooth enough to remember when you did make positive contributions to discussions here and I quite miss it.   

Your non answer is noted.

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Re: Christians who don't make my skin crawl!
« Reply #199 on: February 20, 2018, 09:30:40 PM »
All very interesting. Do you have a link to verify that or was that an anecdote?
I suspect you don't really understand the difference between data and anecdote.

The data are the most recent and complete application data for all secondary and primary schools in my city, collected by Herts County council as they administer the whole admissions process and publish the data. As a school governor I get the data send in a nice easy database, which isn't a direct link.

But should you wish to work it all out for yourself, everything you need is linked to from here:

https://www.hertfordshire.gov.uk/services/schools-and-education/school-admissions/school-admissions-and-transport.aspx?utm_source=homepage&utm_medium=top%20task%20tiles&utm_campaign=top%20task%20tracking&utm_term=school%20admissions