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Re: Should atheism be taugh along side religious studies in schools?
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That said, high schools these days seem to go for RME (religious and moral education) which has a greater focus on the ethical and lifestyle implications of belief and less on the religiosity of individuals or communities, so atheism as a concept would be easier to integrate into the curriculum. As a Christian, I don’t expect my kids to learn their faith in a classroom. I think RME is (or should be) an extension of the humanities. I’m now studying theology at university and completed an introductory module in Ethics last term. I found it tremendously valuable. It was challenging and rewarding, all the more so because it sought to deal with Ethics as something living and real and in current and constant use by everyone, at all times, irrespective of their religion. I think the debate around current live ethical issues such as genetic modification (including human genetic therapy), abortion time limits, euthanasia, drug use, the death penalty, war and a whole lot of other issues would be much more vibrant in our society if there was a greater focus on ethics and the different ethical systems that are used to develop frameworks in which decisions are taken. ---------- Post added at 19:43 ---------- Previous post was at 19:34 ---------- Quote:
If you get stuck on trying to agree or disagree over cosmology you’re not going to get very far and you’re certainly not ever going to understand why a religion like Christianity exists and what the consequences of its existence are for believers and the world. Religious studies, remember, are there to study the religion and its consequences. If you want to contemplate God, then you want theology (which is the term used by Christians at any rate ... you can study the concept of God in an Islamic or Hindu context also, doubtless they have their own terms for that). |
Re: Should atheism be taugh along side religious studies in schools?
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Seeing people as different is taught by parents and some schools via belief systems. So maybe this is what I mean by teaching tolerance. |
Re: Should atheism be taugh along side religious studies in schools?
Children aren't born with a sense of "God". So teaching them that there might be a God (inferable because RE would include religions based on God) causes the children to lean in an improbable direction. Then they get leftfield information about how one religion regards other religions as inimical, one and of them only fit to be wiped out. You see where I'm coming from.
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Re: Should atheism be taugh along side religious studies in schools?
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Religion doesn’t turn humans into murderers. We are quite capable of developing rationales in support of genocide without it. Actually, in ethical terms the appeal to higher authority lessens the likelihood of conflict, not vice versa. |
Re: Should atheism be taugh along side religious studies in schools?
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Re: Should atheism be taugh along side religious studies in schools?
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I’m sorry but I’m an old lag when it comes to the “religion causes war” fallacy. The truth is, humans cause war, in pursuit of resources and power, using whatever philosophical justification is closest at hand at the time. Incidentally, ISIS is a zit on the arse of humanity. The suffering they cause is magnified by the fact that it is contemporary. In comparison with almost any other coherent philosophy, past or present, they’re barely out of the nursery. |
Re: Should atheism be taugh along side religious studies in schools?
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The Crusades; the English Reformation; the Balkans ethnic cleansing, Shia vs Sunni, Northern Ireland. It's all politically driven - power. Yes - humans cause war; but in the name of religion is well documented. Scrap religion and we can tackle other cause of war. Of course we're not going to be able to scrap religion and I predict that in 90 years, we'll all be facing east. |
Re: Should atheism be taugh along side religious studies in schools?
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The crusades are every pub bore’s go-to. Can I request you read about the sacking of Constantinople - a Christian city - in the year 1204, during the fourth crusade, before you make simplistic, sub-GCSE assertions about what motivated the young English nobles who went crusading and what they hoped to get out of the exercise. The English Reformation ... where to begin ... well for starters let me help you out a bit, the Reformation wasn’t English; Protestantism occurred almost everywhere in Europe. It stuck, leading to Reformation, in places where local rulers saw the opportunities inherent in taking control of the influence previously held by the Pope, hence, in the English context, the creation of the Church of England that then allowed Henry VIII to get his divorce. Ordinary people may have been motivated by belief, but it turned violent when their leaders began to seek political advantage. For sure, plenty of blood was shed on the orders of those who believed that heretics must die. The Balkans ethnic cleansing, well exactly ... ethnic, not religious. The Bosnian part of the conflict, where one side was predominantly Muslim, has lived longest in the memory because of the Srebrenica genocide, but the disintegration of Yugoslavia is the story of the disintegration of an artificial state that held together only as long as strongman Marxists were able to retain control. In any case, as many ethnic Germans were slaughtered in Yugoslavia in the aftermath of World War 2 as the combined total of all Serbs, Croats and Bosnians in the conflicts of the 1990s (130,000 or more). I assumed you’re willing to concede that the Yugoslavs had no need of any religious justification to unofficially carry on the war against those they perceived to be German for some three years after the conflict ended everywhere else. Yes, there is often a religious component to conflict. As I’ve said, humans will use whatever philosophical justification is at hand in pursuit of power and resources. But “in the name of religion”? I’m not entirely convinced even you know what you mean by that. |
Re: Should atheism be taugh along side religious studies in schools?
There’s no point. Stop now.
You cannot argue with a person of faith, likewise a person of faith cannot argue with someone that is not a person of faith. It will decend into a slanging match about religion and just end there. |
Re: Should atheism be taugh along side religious studies in schools?
It should definitely be taught / considered that atheism or agnosticism are as valid as any other choices, and maybe also evaluate the former Gods and the claims of heresy aginst such things as the Earth orbiting the Sun.
The only proof of religion, has been when it has been proved to be wrong, though perhaps the basic problem is that religion can only exist in the vacuum where proof and science have not yet reached, the same vacuum occupied by sharks and charlatans, the snake oil salesmen, the purveyors of "health giving" radioactive quackery (see "revigator" and be shocked). Belief can be harmful. |
Re: Should atheism be taugh along side religious studies in schools?
I used to think that religion should be kept out of our schools. I still do. I think that the old religious morning assembly has become pointless in a multi-faith society where some of the school are not Christian and are thus exempt from attendance.
I do however think teaching the basic tenets of differing religions can only add to pupil's knowledge and understanding why others are the way they are. |
Re: Should atheism be taught along side religious studies in schools?
At my old school there were two systems in place
1 God did it. 2 sit in detention after school . |
Re: Should atheism be taught along side religious studies in schools?
Well time for a change.
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Re: Should atheism be taught along side religious studies in schools?
I think for some athiests, atheism almost *is* a religion, just with no defined deity (although some seem to worship Richard Dawkins as if he is one). They certainly show a lot of the piousness they say that religious people show.
Personally, I don't believe in God. I believe something created us, but I don't define that thing as a God, in fact I am not sure I can define it. I am unsure if it still exists. Do I think Religion causes wars? No. I believe it's an excuse. I believe the Human race would have wars and just use another excuse should Religion just vanish. Do I think RE is a good thing. Yes, if it's taught correctly. It shouldn't be just telling people about a particular religion, or how good a given deity is. It should be teaching people the basis of all belief systems (I even count atheism as a belief system). It should also teach people how to look at things critically, but fairly. Regardless of which religion you believe in, and even if you are an atheist, people may not believe the same things as you. Understanding those beliefs, and the basis for them helps in breaking down barriers between people. Something I think that especially now, the human race needs to happen. |
Re: Should atheism be taught along side religious studies in schools?
Atheism, no, "secular philosophy" yes
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