Hi Gabriella – sorry it’s taken a while.
I’d have to write a thesis to reply to you point by point so I’ll try to summarise (what seem to me to be) your key issues if that’s ok.
Hi BHS. No problem. Sure.
There’s no reason for people to clamour for change if they think their beliefs are correct. The issue though is deeper than that – it’s about why they think they’re correct, especially in countries where church and state are the same thing.
Sorry, I am not sure what point you are trying to make here. Are you suggesting that the only reason people do not clamour for change is because they think their beliefs are right? Presumably most people think their beliefs are correct – if they didn’t they would not hold those beliefs surely?
Or do you agree that many people do not clamour for change for many reasons, including because an issue does not impact them negatively enough to make the effort to clamour for change? Which might mean that you might see something very negative about religious privilege but many other people might be apathetic about the issue because it does not have sufficient negative impact on them compared to some of the positives they perceive, even if they are not religious. It seems to me that
not clamouring for change is the way a lot of people deal with many issues for a variety of reasons.
For example, people who are not easily offended cannot understand the fuss made by people who are easily offended, but the ‘not easily offended’ crowd are not all clamouring for change against the police using Section 5 of the Public Order Act 1986, which says that despite not having the intention to be threatening, abusive or insulting or the intention to cause harassment, alarm or distress, a person "is guilty of an offence if he (a) uses threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour, or disorderly behaviour, or (b) displays any writing, sign or other visible representation which is threatening, abusive or insulting, within the hearing or sight of a person likely to be caused harassment, alarm or distress thereby".
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2012/jun/06/section-5-harassment-free-speechSo ok we have a similar situation with religion – many theists and atheists are not clamouring for change to certain religious privileges. You have not demonstrated that not clamouring for change enables us to draw any evidenced conclusion about what the theists and atheists really think about religious privilege. We just seem to have your guess here about why they are not clamouring for change.
See above. A thought experiment: let’s say that the CofE was invented tomorrow, and that it launched a manifesto demanding the same integration and rights of access in education, in the legislation, in media reporting that it enjoys now. How many would vote for that do you think? The point here is that apathy regarding change isn’t an unfettered choice given the huge enculturation of the thing to be changed.
Yes I agree there are many things that are not unfettered choices due to the prevailing cultural norms, history and tradition which can lead to biases. So far so normal. The movement trying to communicate BAME experiences of white cultural norms in predominately white countries is trying to make that very point that there are no unfettered choices.
The point is that societies to varying degrees don’t respond with a “so what” to religious claims – they privilege them in all sorts of ways that affect their populations as a whole, extremely so in the case of theocracies. How long before Roe v Wade is up for grabs the US given the make-up of the Supreme Court do you think?
Ok I agree – societies to a varying degree do not respond with “so what” to religious claims.
I mean this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_rights_in_Muslim-majority_countries
This is what happens when “but that’s my faith” isn’t met with a “so what?”. You I think subscribe to a book in whose name these abuses occur. If I were you that would give me pause. Why doesn’t it you?
It depends what you define as pause. I fully support anyone saying “so what” to ”that’s my faith”. That does not mean that the Quran cannot be a source of comfort or benefit to other people.
https://www.legalfutures.co.uk/latest-news/quran-quoting-barrister-receives-apology-from-counsel-who-asked-him-to-stop As this example suggests even though one person’s reaction to the Quran was “so what” it did not prevent him from acknowledging that others think differently and he was still able to find a connection and common ground. Similarly, the lawyer who advised on Sharia law practice in relation to family law acknowledged that people may have a “so what” reaction to his Quran quotes on LinkedIn and responded “I am the head of sharia law at my chambers and this platform is suitable for my practice which also happens to be my religion. If you have a problem with my messages then I would ask you to respectfully remove me from your connection.”.
This is not to support Sharia courts, which is a whole separate issue. I am just illustrating that there are different ways of handling disagreement when it comes to beliefs and that it is possible to “ acknowledge our differences and find connection on common ground; pause, reflect, move forward, carrying each other together”.
I assume you agree that people can be unhappy about specific behaviour and interpretations of beliefs without wholesale abandon of those beliefs? Hence, we have not abandoned our cultural and political beliefs in parliamentary democracy in the UK just because successive governments use laws passed by Parliament to allow UK companies to sell weapons to Middle Eastern governments that have atrocious human rights records. Similarly, it is possible for theists to acknowledge the harm religion can cause but not see a significant benefit to abandoning religion that outweighs the costs to them and their loved ones. I can of course see why other people would conclude the opposite and see the benefits of abandoning religion as outweighing any costs, but then again I could see why some people believed the benefits of Brexit outweighed the costs even though I voted Remain.
The top trumps is in debate about these matters. And yes, we two are very lucky to live in a secular country in which the rules of a religion are not also the law of the land – plenty of people around the world are not so lucky though.
Agreed that other countries with different systems of government might repress the freedom of their citizens including freedom of political or religious belief.
Category error: someone having gender reassignment surgery (for example) doesn’t affect anyone else; someone having their faith convictions privileged in the public square does.
You do not seem to understand my point. The issue is not someone’s right to have gender reassignment surgery. The issue is whether privileging someone’s belief of self-identity of their gender can let them have access to spaces designed to protect people of the opposite biological sex. The right to access these spaces – whether it is in sport, refuges, short-lists, medical health services, prisons, relationship services – does affect others.
That’s quite a pivot. The point here is that the clerics in charge are the dictators.
Not sure what point you are making by saying it’s a pivot. Are you agreeing or disagreeing with the point I made that in other countries run by dictators or repressive regimes or in the middle of civil wars, as expected the religious practices of those people are in line with their cultural, social and political practices i.e. some people show bravery, kindness and tolerance and some people don't?
My point is that the clerics combined with repressive governments with access to military resources are in charge. Communal violence ie. mobs of violent citizens attacking people with impunity means there are parts of the country where rule of law has been severely eroded. Some moderately religious politicians have formed alliances with religious extremists elements in order to use the thuggery of citizens loyal to a particular person to secure a seat in Parliament or to forcibly take over community institutions.
In Sri Lanka, for example, which is a Buddhist majority country, when local Muslim thugs proliferate hate and threaten violence in local council elections, nothing is done by the authorities or the Election Commission to hold them accountable. That is clearly not because the Buddhist authorities privilege the beliefs of Muslims but may have more to do with turning a blind-eye to local thugs for political reasons such as those thugs or their bosses being potential useful for future coercion and control of voters or to avoid a flash-point or confrontation that could lose the government future political capital or it may be just a lack of police resources to tackle the issue of local violence. Whatever the complex reasons, religious privilege being the cause is simplistic and not a convincing argument due to lack of supporting evidence. There may be evidence that demonstrates that focusing on that argument has helped solve the problems in these countries and happy to take a look at any links you provide of a case study of these types of countries that support your argument.
No, I’m saying (yet again) that if people are enculturated to think faith claims are epistemically valid and the faith claim in question is an omniscient god, then what force could mere philosophy done by fallible humans have?
You must be relieved then that culture is changing in the UK and people can be religious without being encultured to think faith claims are epistemically valid even if the claims involve omniscient gods. The more multi-cultural UK has become, the more people become aware that the competing faith claims involving competing omniscient gods can’t all be epistemically valid. Hopefully that realisation will eventually seep through to other parts of the world, which are less multi-cultural. The more cultures open up due to quick and cheap travel and communication between remote culturally-closed areas, the more opportunities there are for people to learn about and acknowledge differences in perspective. How people respond to those opportunities will be down to a variety of social, political, economic, technological, religious, cultural, educational, evolutionary, and genetic factors.
No - see above. Religion vs philosophy & reason is a rigged game – albeit to varying degrees depending on the degree of entrenchment of faith in the state concerned. That’s the point.
See above. You must be glad that this is changing whereby other factors play an increasing influence on people due to changing technology.
Some would say that it’s anything but nice, but that’s not the point. The point rather was that if you think that the interpretation of it is all, as it’s fallible humans doing the interpreting what’s the point claiming inerrancy in the text?
Claiming inerrancy in the text is part of the tradition – it’s just one of the beliefs that give followers a sense of there being something sacred about the book. Obviously no one can establish the truth of this claim . It gives the Quran more value and means people handle the book with respect when they pick it up or put it down. It gives followers a feeling that an unseen, immaterial Allah is near and they feel connected by the words even if they cannot understand the words clearly. That’s why people feel comforted by reciting the Quran in Arabic even though they often have no clue about the meaning because they have not studied Arabic.
You have got to be kidding right? Saudi Arabia? Pakistan? Afghanistan? Yemen? Need I go on?
You seem to have misunderstood my point, which was that I don’t think the Quran has any special privilege. Other people might think the Quran has special privilege.
Anyone who reads the news perhaps? I find your indifference to the practical application of a book you think to be “a nice story” to be chilling to be frank. If you at least resiled to “here’s an early and fairy crude attempt at moral philosophy written by people anchored in the realities of their time and place” that at least would be a step back from the tacit support your response gives to atrocities done in its name wouldn’t it?
Your feelings are noted. I am sorry you find my response chilling based on your interpretation of my response as tacit support for atrocities. Presumably you do not expect your interpretation and your feelings to be an over-riding factor in my reasoning of how I should respond to things?
I do not blindly accept other people’s interpretations of the Quran or their interpretations of my responses. All I can suggest is that you could try changing your interpretation of my response or try adopting a different perspective if you want to feel less chilled. Or not. Up to you.
But you do think there is a “one true message” right? That’s the problem the moment you give credence to that idea you open the door to people convincing themselves to knowing what it is, with all that follows from that. Limit yourself to, “it’s interesting but fallible” on the other hand and that rationale goes away.
If you mean do I believe it is true that there is a supernatural creator entity communicating that we are all different and will have different interpretations to the same input due to brain and environmental differences and we should try to acknowledge and be tolerant of our different understanding of inputs to try to find a way to live relatively peaceably together, then yes I think that is true. I don't think the human race is capable of eliminating violence but we can certainly learn to improve on how we deal with differences.
And no I don’t believe that you have demonstrated that my belief in an inerrant supernatural entity opens the door for other people to convince themselves to knowing what messages from that entity mean. I also don’t think you have demonstrated that people who think they know what is right, true or correct open the door for other people to commit atrocities in the name of what they believe is right, true or correct.
Not that I mind if you hold that belief about opening doors if you believe it is true and you are right.
Aren’t you the lucky one then. Sadly, that’s not the experience of millions of others who have grown up in very different societies that treat (their interpretation of) that’s books rules as inerrant.
Yes I would agree with you – we are lucky in many ways – we have lots of privileges such as wealth, education, family structure, living in a country with rule of law, political and legal accountability.
More whataboutery, and you’re conflating debatable ideas with privileged “but that’s my faith” idea too.
Disagree. For example, I think many of the ideas I mentioned are privileged in the laws of the UK and in what is taught in schools so why the special pleading for religious privilege? I do not agree that religious ideas are not up for debate. Any idea is up for debate regardless of whether the person advancing the idea tries to justify it with "that's my faith" or "I really, really, really believe it's true". Whether political, ethical, religious etc ideas are up for debate depends on the culture or society they are being brought up in. That’s not whataboutery – that’s the complexity of human interaction.
So you think that, say, the people of Pakistan have a different nature and nurture such that they march in the street demanding a blasphemer be hung to the people of the UK who don’t?
Doesn’t work does it.
I’m not sure where to start with that generalisation. The people of Pakistan do not all march the street demanding a blasphemer be hung. Pakistan has a population of over 212 million. But do I think the minority who do march demanding death to blasphemers have a different nature/ nurture from those who don’t march in Pakistan or any other country making those demands? Yes I do for the reasons given about determinism and reasoning and cause and effect and genetic, cultural, social, political, economic and technological environments, upbringing, education and life circumstances influencing people’s perspectives, emotions and behaviour. What is your explanation why some people’s religious interpretations are benign and others are violent?
But other people do, and that do it most where beliefs about gods are certain and enforced.
Do you now agree with my “simplistic” argument? If not, why not?
I agree with parts of them. I see your point that for some people having certainty that what they are doing is right can sometimes lead to violent atrocities. I do not agree that the certainty leading to violent actions by those people is a reason for other law-abiding people to abandon their religious faith. I think more can be achieved by finding common ground, which may or may not include retaining faith, and using that to reform people’s behaviour, though this is at times slow-going, as are any cultural changes that requires self-awareness. I think when I talk to Muslims as a Muslim, I can understand certain aspects of their thinking and I do not have the same reaction to some of their religious ideas even if I disagree with them, as an atheist would have to those ideas. As a Muslim, I can disagree, influence and persuade a Muslim in a different manner from an atheist. And being on this forum has helped me understand how to communicate better with atheists and to understand better where atheists are coming from and to re-examine some of the problems caused by religion.
Useful communication requires people to pause, to honestly examine their perceptions, reactions and outlook, acknowledge differences while trying to find commonality to move forward. Some people find this easier to do than others. I think you and I have a lot of common ground despite me having a religious faith and you having none.