When I said that 'the research goes against basic Jain tenets' .....I did not mean that the research should pander to religious beliefs.....for heaven's sake!
You are now quote mining yourself. What you actually said was.
'I don't know what the research is worth when it goes against basic Jain tenets.'The flip side of which will be that research is only of worth aligns with basic Jain tenets (i.e. a religion etc). I don't think my understanding of your post is anything other than completely reasonable. But then in your clarification you make matters even worse.
So, if your research says that 99% of Jains believe in a Supreme God.....there is obviously something wrong with the research. Get it?!
So in effect if research goes against your assertions of what Jainism is about, or even actually what Jainism is about, then the research must be wrong. Terrifying - horrific echo chamber attitude, 'research doesn't agree with me, research is wrong.'
Well, here is news for you Sriram - Pew research are an extremely reputable research organisation who use robust and validated methods to ascertain public opinion. Their methododologies do have a margin of error, but with the numbers of people within the research this will probably only be 1% - so when they conclude 99% believe in god the real value may be as low as 98% or as high as 100%.
Sriram - the research isn't wrong - it requires you to potentially rethink your assumptions.
Actually in this case there is nothing 'clunky' about the research in relation to Jain religious philosophy. Jainism is clearly theistic, just does not accept a creator god. The research didn't ask about a creator god, merely whether an individual believed in god/gods. 99% of Jains said they did - so what, so very Jainist.
But even if a large proportion showed that they did not agree with an element of the basic tenets of the religion they affiliate to, that doesn't mean that the research is wrong. What it means is that although people may self affiliate as, for example christian, that doesn't mean they necessarily believe in things that christianity teaches - e.g. virgin birth, actual resurrection of Jesus etc. Survey after survey has show this for all sorts of religions. Whisper it quietly so Sriram won't hear - lot's of people who say they are of a particular religion don't actually believe everything that the religion teaches them.
Bottom line Sriram - if high quality research runs counter to your assertions, it isn't the research that is wrong, it is your assertion.