Are people who not only have a world view but are or have professionally committed to it's promotion, who have studied it and have had a responsibility oriented to that world view COMMUNITY subject to the same motivations as those who are there for party political, temporal, financial reasons? I think not
Are their motivations the same? My experience is that some atheists are altruistic and some theists are altruistic in certain situations and sometimes they both do not have altruistic motives. The evidence suggests both can be selfish, misguided, ignorant, motivated by money, political power etc etc in certain situations. So not seeing any significant difference in the motivation of people seeking political influence by sitting in the HofL regardless of being spiritual or not.
By world view, do you mean the Lords Spiritual share the world view of a hope and belief in a supernatural entity that exercises moral judgement?
Other than that, as with the diversity of thought and interpretation of all people, religious or otherwise, people's concepts of the supernatural entity are different, their concepts of the morality of the supernatural entity are different, how much tolerance they show to other opinions are different, their resultant moral decisions are different, their interpretation of the various religious texts are different.
I don't think that believing in a supernatural entity will lead to morally better or even different decisions from those who are there for party political, temporal, financial reasons. The reason being is that a lot of spiritual people serve their own interests first or put party political, temporal, financial reasons head of spiritual considerations.
The question is whether a belief in a supernatural entity is of sufficient significance in the social sphere to have an automatic seat at the table for a group of people who share that belief. I am not convinced that their belief deserves automatic rights - if their message is beneficial then they should be there because they have sufficient skills to convince the public of why they need a seat at the table. The only other possible argument is if the public view spiritual people as deserving of an automatic seat as a discriminated against minority - like a quota system.
If they at least believe in a Lords spiritual as I do, their presence automatically represents human citizens better than their absence.
Sure - but it might be at the expense of other special interests as there are limited seats. So one way to solve the competing interests is for everyone to stand for election and no one getting an automatic seat.
I would put it differently. Outrider IMV wishes to do away with the Lords spiritual as a way of advancing a view of humanity he would like people to be inveigled into via stealth erosion of religious views. That view could though be accomodated in what I propose. But his view is exclusive of any spiritual view.
An election means no one has control over the outcome - its in the hands of the voters, not in the control of Outrider. That's usually a fair method unless minorities are not being represented. Is that your argument for an automatic seat for Lords Spiritual?
So he wants an elected House of Lords This is a question of categories of Lords. An increase in categories is IMV more representative than having one category. particularly if one type represents the quotidien yet transient politico economic views and one type represents a wide range of world views.
What would you suggest is a fair way for Society to pick these categories and decide how many seats are assigned to each category?