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Originally posted by Dirty Sanchez View PostOutrageous to you, but backed by plenty of data. One such example would be the bible belt in America. It's no coincidence the influence of religion is a reflection of the highest rate of illiteracy in the country.Last edited by Howiee; 18-11-2015, 13:50.
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Originally posted by charlesr View Post
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Originally posted by Howiee View PostCorrelation does not mean causation. How do you measure 'influence of religion' anyway? I have visions of some sort of religious PKE meter going on. There are 3 billion-odd Christians in the world, covering many continents, cultures, backgrounds and races. India, home to many of the brightest minds on the planet, has a religious belief rate north of 95%. The whole 'lack of education = religious belief' argument strikes me as anti-religious rhetoric, tbh.Last edited by endo; 18-11-2015, 13:58.
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Originally posted by endo View PostBeyond that, there are other disciplines, such as philosophy, that attempt to answer the type of questions you mention without any religious/supernatural aspect.
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Originally posted by Howiee View PostI'm not sure that's true. Stalin's 'League of Militant Atheists' (actual name) killed more people on an average Tuesday than Isis ever will ? all in the name of scientific socialism. The same goes for the systematically irreligious regimes of Pol Pot, Ceausescu, modern North Korea, and others. In fact, the Encyclopedia of Wars states that only 7% of all history's wars were religious (123 out of 1763). Religion can certainly be a problem, but it isn't the problem. People are the problem.
I don't think reducing religion to "sitting on your arse praying" is particularly helpful. Religion seeks to find serious answers to the serious questions that science can't answer ? ultimate meaning, morality, what ought to be, etc. Science and religion are two very different ? and worthy ? things. But of course, lunatics exist on the fringe of every movement, religious or not.
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Originally posted by Howiee View PostCorrelation does not mean causation. How do you measure 'influence of religion' anyway? I have visions of some sort of religious PKE meter going on. There are 3 billion-odd Christians in the world, covering many continents, cultures, backgrounds and races. India, home to many of the brightest minds on the planet, has a religious belief rate north of 95%. The whole 'lack of education = religious belief' argument strikes me as anti-religious rhetoric, tbh.Last edited by PaTaito; 18-11-2015, 14:09.
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Definitely an issue of equating the wrong things. Remember that massive Tsunami in Thailand 10 years ago? A woman I know who had recently (few years) become a strong Christian told my daughter that it was God's way of washing away sin. Yeah, washing away the sins of babies. Now, she wasn't stupid and ignorant because she was Christian and her thoughts and opinions did not represent Christians the world over; she was just stupid and ignorant because that's who she was but she'd referred to her faith to explain the situation, and it's people (stupid people I might add) interpreting that in the wrong way that causes things like that woman who banned Muslims from her beauty salon after the Paris attacks earlier this week. She believed that she knew the reason why that disaster had happened; her religion had the answer for her.
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Originally posted by Howiee View PostI would argue that religion falls under philosophy. The God / no God question is kind of central to all those questions, in my opinion – with very different realities and consequences should either be true.
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Originally posted by PaTaito View PostThat would be one hurdle...If you are part of a large and strict family who all partake, are you likely to be the odd one out? Thousands of years of tradition takes a lot of time to wear off.
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Originally posted by endo View PostHmm, some vague assertions there.
And besides, even if a person's religious belief was connected to a lack of education, it would not make their religious claim untrue. Attack the claim not the person.
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Originally posted by endo View PostHmm, some vague assertions there. "Home to many of the brightest minds on the planet": how many, exactly, out of a population of 1.2 billion? India has an overall literacy rate of 75% (with a marked difference between male and female literacy). India also has some of the worst poverty and deprivation anywhere in the world. Many millions of people are uneducated and utterly marginalised. The "many of the brightest minds on the planet" thing is a bit of a red herring here. There are undoubtedly some extremely intelligent people in India, as there always has been, but for all we know they might be the same 5% of the population who don't follow any religion.
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