Most seats in the Hol are closed to the majority of the population.... all are closed in view of election.
And yet we're discussing proposals for a new upper house - as you well know. Sadly familiar attempt at avoidance noted.
There is a Hard secularism and a soft secularism. The entry in wikipedia on secularisms outline what Hard and Soft secularism are.
It doesn't mention either.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SecularismOne paper referenced in the bibliography talks about 'hard' secularists taking the position that religion is inherently unworthy and attempting to excise it from the public realm - that's not what's being suggested here, no-one is proposing banning religious people from being in the upper house, no-one is even suggesting that religious organisations should not be able to put forward candidates.
If I am upset Jeremy it is on the banning of the original meaning of secular which is where we get Lords Temporal from.
Actually, as is made clear in the paper that was referenced in the Wikipedia article on secularism, 'secular' as a term is a product of religion, something religious organisations took it up on themselves to define to clarify those things that weren't of a religious nature - things like government and politics.
Life under the definition was spiritual and temporal and was seen as balancing the two.
And yet there's no justification for that assumption that anything in life is 'spiritual', nor that even if there were any particular group has a good handle on it.
Under the present definition you can contemplate a totally secular life and that represents an homonculus.
No. Removing privileged seats for religion from the upper house neither removes religious people nor religious topics from that house - it just doesn't predispose the house in any way.
So it is not a case of me not wanting to lose privileges, that is a misconception that permits you to hate.
It's exactly that, because no-one is suggesting anything else. The Church of England currently has a privileged position, by way of reserved seats. You acknowledge that's not politically or socially viable, so you're trying to cling to a part of it by broadening the scope of those reserved seats. The problem is that, although it may well have been the presence of the Bishops that attracted the attention in the first place, many people have come to the realisation that the problem is reserved seats, not the presence of Bishops per se, so your attempt to cling to relevance isn't addressing the underlying issue, just the symptom.
It is a case of diminishing the spiritual aspect of humanity however you define that. If you don't like the word spiritual I am happy with the term ''nontemporal'' or belief or world view.
Call it whatever you'd like; unless you can demonstrate that it's actually a thing, then it carries no more or less weight than anyone else's opinion, and goes out to the electorate like everything else. If you can demonstrate it, then you need to show why it merits different consideration to everything else, or it can just go out to the electorate like everything else.
O.