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Religion

In reply to the discussion: Is religion good for kids? [View all]

cbayer

(146,218 posts)
80. I agree that teaching hatred toward others not your kind is a bad thing,
Mon Jul 28, 2014, 07:39 AM
Jul 2014

and I would include in that teaching that religious people have a "blind adherence to delusional thinking".

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Is religion good for kids? [View all] cbayer Jul 2014 OP
Conversely, is absence of religious teaching bad for kids? merrily Jul 2014 #1
I don't think there is a strong case either way. cbayer Jul 2014 #5
Exactly my point: not a strong case either way. I think more turns on merrily Jul 2014 #33
I agree with you for the most part. cbayer Jul 2014 #38
Disney fits the perimeters of a religion... Tikki Jul 2014 #2
I have no idea what this means. Do you want to expand on it? cbayer Jul 2014 #14
Disney meets all the criteria in the sentence below.. Tikki Jul 2014 #16
Ah, I hear you and I agree. There are many ways for children to engage in cbayer Jul 2014 #19
And do you think edhopper Jul 2014 #25
As there is nothing substantial to either prove nor disprove religious beliefs, cbayer Jul 2014 #28
It is extremely easy to disprove the religious belief in physical miracles, "all" we "ask" for. Brettongarcia Jul 2014 #58
In general I say yes except when it is strict and abusive. hrmjustin Jul 2014 #3
It's too simplistic a question. Whether it is good or bad for kids depends on cbayer Jul 2014 #6
Agreed! The question is not a simpld yes or no. hrmjustin Jul 2014 #7
The style of the religion is very important IphengeniaBlumgarten Jul 2014 #15
I'm pretty much on the same page as you. cbayer Jul 2014 #18
It depends if you think being able to discern fact from fiction is Warren Stupidity Jul 2014 #4
There are other edhopper Jul 2014 #8
I agree that there are certainly other ways, but I don't think there is necessarily better ways. cbayer Jul 2014 #11
As I said edhopper Jul 2014 #17
Lots of fantasy play never says it is pretend. cbayer Jul 2014 #23
Just look at the polls edhopper Jul 2014 #27
Because the bulk of the world doesn't think it's pretend. cbayer Jul 2014 #31
I have nothing to back up edhopper Jul 2014 #35
Sure there are things where there is actual data supporting that some cbayer Jul 2014 #39
I was talking about teaching religion without edhopper Jul 2014 #44
You can't say they are imaginary anymore than you can say they are real, cbayer Jul 2014 #45
You keep making this argument but you can't prove a negative. JNelson6563 Jul 2014 #48
So, do you think you have more standing to say that there is no god cbayer Jul 2014 #50
So the existence of the Flying Spaghetti Monster is fact. Good. GoneFishin Jul 2014 #53
Who said it was fact? Where did you get that idea? cbayer Jul 2014 #54
I did. GoneFishin Jul 2014 #55
Oh, ok. Good for you. Believe whatever you want. cbayer Jul 2014 #56
Well, "almost everyone" has no more authority on that point than I do. GoneFishin Jul 2014 #57
Exactly right. They have no more standing than you do. cbayer Jul 2014 #59
I've explained this before but you seem to forget. JNelson6563 Jul 2014 #66
Well, I am a very forgetful person. cbayer Jul 2014 #67
Quite honestly, one of the reasons I like coming to this forum... trotsky Jul 2014 #81
wtf? where is the data that ghosts aren't real? Warren Stupidity Jul 2014 #61
It's a tool. Erich Bloodaxe BSN Jul 2014 #9
Which most religions don't do edhopper Jul 2014 #10
Again, I would ask you for data that shows any correlation between being taught religious cbayer Jul 2014 #13
Yes I see all the people who believe biblical stories arevtrue edhopper Jul 2014 #20
Do you want to give that another shot. cbayer Jul 2014 #24
Adult belief in the supernaturasl edhopper Jul 2014 #30
And that is only your opinion. There is no data or studies or cbayer Jul 2014 #34
Comparing belief in god to belief in santa is a lazy and unconvincing argument. cbayer Jul 2014 #12
except of course that you cannot provide a compelling argument for why Warren Stupidity Jul 2014 #21
The author of the article compared them edhopper Jul 2014 #22
I agree that he is lay and unconvincing. cbayer Jul 2014 #26
Good to hear. edhopper Jul 2014 #29
Unconvincing to someone who has been inculcated with Erich Bloodaxe BSN Jul 2014 #32
Of course there is no need to convince those who don't believe. cbayer Jul 2014 #36
Only if they are not going to be sacrifi ... oh, you meant human children! intaglio Jul 2014 #37
That's a good one. cbayer Jul 2014 #40
A bit of spinning intaglio Jul 2014 #41
Aw, that's sweet. You don't find this cute?? What is wrong with you. cbayer Jul 2014 #42
(subsides into a quivering heap) n/t intaglio Jul 2014 #43
I'm agnostic and completely secular but some aspects of religion help kids cope w. anxiety. Smarmie Doofus Jul 2014 #46
I agree that kids should be encouraged to make up their own minds at some point. cbayer Jul 2014 #47
Actually the guardian angel nonsense caused me to first doubt at age 5 or so. JNelson6563 Jul 2014 #49
That is very sad and very understandable. cbayer Jul 2014 #51
Actually religion was a comfort to me. JNelson6563 Jul 2014 #68
I have read about your history previously. You write about it very well. cbayer Jul 2014 #69
This review topspins the real article; and it was written by an "executive" for an "e-commerce" co. Brettongarcia Jul 2014 #52
What the peer reviewed article actually said. Warren Stupidity Jul 2014 #60
Last time we had this thread, the phrase 'akin to child abuse' was used. AtheistCrusader Jul 2014 #62
"aid in the cognitive development of children" AtheistCrusader Jul 2014 #63
Really? Do you have any data to back that up, or is that just a belief you have based on faith? cbayer Jul 2014 #64
Again if you think that the ability to discern Warren Stupidity Jul 2014 #70
Example: someone who thought "Snow White" was historical reality, might do badly on a History test Brettongarcia Jul 2014 #72
The data is in the study you cited. When I read my son 'The Hobbit' I am clear that none of it is AtheistCrusader Jul 2014 #73
that's not what that study says at all. cbayer Jul 2014 #74
I think there is, if their kids can't tell the diff between fantasy and reality. AtheistCrusader Jul 2014 #75
It's part of being a kid to not be able to tell the difference. cbayer Jul 2014 #76
I view it as a problem. AtheistCrusader Jul 2014 #82
So every time you read your child a fairy tell, you tell cbayer Jul 2014 #83
I do not read my child 'traditional fairy tales' that require explicit differentiation from reality. AtheistCrusader Jul 2014 #84
That's quite the unusual child you have. cbayer Jul 2014 #85
If exposed to an idea, he might run with it, sure. AtheistCrusader Jul 2014 #86
He sounds like a great kid. cbayer Jul 2014 #87
"Unless there are problems, no one should tell you how to parent." trotsky Jul 2014 #88
I agree. The comments section of the WashPo review article, has a good comment on "imagination" Brettongarcia Jul 2014 #65
I'll take false dichotomies for 2000. Warren Stupidity Jul 2014 #71
Teaching empathy and morals yes. Religion no, teaches ignorance on point Jul 2014 #77
I agree that teaching hatred toward others not your kind is a bad thing, cbayer Jul 2014 #80
wow! the logic is astounding! unblock Jul 2014 #78
When parents read fairy tales and fables to their young children, cbayer Jul 2014 #79
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