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Religion
In reply to the discussion: When religious people do bad things in the name of religion... [View all]Htom Sirveaux
(1,242 posts)25. As you say, the graph is between Born Agains v. Non-Born Agains
For American Christians, The Oxford Handbook of Religion and American Politics notes: "The GSS ... has asked a born-again question on three occasions ... 'Would you say you have been 'born again' or have had a 'born-again' experience?" The Handbook says that "Evangelical, black, and Latino Protestants tend to respond similarly, with about two-thirds of each group answering in the affirmative. In contrast, only about one third of mainline Protestants and one sixth of Catholics (Anglo and Latino) claim a born-again experience." However, the handbook suggests that "born-again questions are poor measures even for capturing evangelical respondents. ... it is likely that people who report a born-again experience also claim it as an identity."[23]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Born_again_%28Christianity%29
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Born_again_%28Christianity%29
That means that 1/3rd Evangelical/Black/Latino Protestants, 2/3rds mainline protestants, and 5/6ths of all Catholics are in the group (non-born-agains) that changed quicker. That further means that there are religious people on both sides of that graph, with a particular kind of religious people changing slower than others, yet still changing. The idea that religion as a whole is uniquely stubborn is still empirically falsified, and as I've been saying, it would be question-begging to privilege one group over the other as the "real" form of religion.
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The article is not about whether or not you give a shit about religious beliefs or not.
rug
Jul 2014
#4
You just equated a process that is used to detemine the nature of reality to a made up bit
AtheistCrusader
Jul 2014
#33
Sounds like the Dianetics book someone sent me when I graduated high school.
AtheistCrusader
Jul 2014
#43
Fine I still don't give a shit what you think of me yourself or any other thing.
upaloopa
Jul 2014
#66
Ok, then change it to "Without religion, would people still give charity to the poor"
Htom Sirveaux
Jul 2014
#17
Eh? You just sabotaged your own graph by undermining the lone distinction it made.
trotsky
Jul 2014
#32
No, you're just wanting to pick a more nebulous standard for how we judge someone as being...
trotsky
Jul 2014
#99
Using Sociology, we could call "religion" whatever calls itself that, or is called that, say.
Brettongarcia
Jul 2014
#8
OK Sirveau: so you've finally decided to come out as a Christian Liberal apologist.
Brettongarcia
Jul 2014
#54
I see problems for the authors' thesis: very liberal states often have severe environment
Brettongarcia
Jul 2014
#9
Saying slave states suffered 'threats' seems a strange value judgement
muriel_volestrangler
Jul 2014
#14
What about the excuses for the states responsible for the procurement and transportation of slaves
Leontius
Jul 2014
#28
Are you the new "But It's Not Because Of Religion!" Spokesperson? I saw there was a vacancy.
mr blur
Jul 2014
#30
I think it is pretty exciting too. That post has been vacant for a while.
Warren Stupidity
Jul 2014
#47
I think this is a very interesting study, even if the results are not surprising.
cbayer
Jul 2014
#53
I find it unsurprising that strong religion is linked to poverty and ignorance; to the South
Brettongarcia
Jul 2014
#55
And the chief voice of anti-abortionism ... was Catholic conservative religion.
Brettongarcia
Jul 2014
#72
When you bond religion into the national, cultural, ethnic or racial and economic identity of a
Leontius
Jul 2014
#100
But many people give all the other motivations a pass and just assign blame to religion.
Leontius
Jul 2014
#103
Except you can't move on without being able to separate motivation from justification.
Leontius
Jul 2014
#109
Let's turn that around: what if it is claimed that religion doesn't have positive effects ...
Brettongarcia
Jul 2014
#73
But since the claim is clearly false, your statement is meaningless. n/t
Fortinbras Armstrong
Jul 2014
#77