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Is 'no religion' a new religion? : Comments
By Spencer Gear, published 19/7/2016The ABS's 'no religion' category on the Census is parallel to labelling a fruit cake as a no-cake for public display and use.
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Posted by RationalRazor, Friday, 22 July 2016 11:27:42 AM
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Form Designer,
That’s a creative, alphabetical approach to the ‘What is your religion?’ question 19 on the Census form. I cannot imagine the ABS wanting to do your suggested detailed Q 19 for religion as that would require a similar approach to detail in every other question (but surely that is a reasonable request if the ABS is wanting comprehensive Census data). If the Question remains – as it will be for Census 2016 – who do you think will be completing the ‘No religion’ category? Atheists, agnostics, secularists, environmentalists, socialists, etc.? My point is that the ‘No religion’ category is so poorly defined that the information gained would be essentially useless to decipher, as it tells nothing about those who comprise this group. There’s the complicating factor that atheists and secularists (for example) wouldn’t like to be included in the broad definition of religion provided by the Macquarie Dictionary. Ian Royall’s article in the Herald Sun (‘Campaign for “no-religion” census hits advertising block at major shopping centres’, 13 July 2016) admits this: ‘In the 2011 census, 4.7 million, or 22 per cent, chose the “no religion” box or wrote down atheism, agnosticism, humanism or rationalism in the “other, please specify” box’. At least some acknowledged that atheism, agnosticism, humanism and rationalism fit in the category of ‘other religion’. This is the point that I’m raising. They are religions, but are not often seen as such, but need to be exposed for what they are – religious. The ‘no religion’ campaign for the 2016 Census is promoted by the Atheist Foundation of Australia Ltd, with campaign sponsors, Rationalist Society of Australia and Sydney Atheists (see http://censusnoreligion.org.au/). Spencer Posted by OzSpen, Friday, 22 July 2016 11:43:28 AM
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Pogi (Wed),
Your Budget Macquarie Dictionary (3rd. ed 2000) does not agree with the citation I provided. I cited from my hard copy of the unabridged Macquarie Dictionary (1997 3rd ed. s v religion) as I stated in the article. It was the first definition. I wasn’t lying. You have the audacity to quote from the Budget Macquarie Dictionary 3rd ed 2000 but you didn’t bother to check the edition from which I quoted to demonstrate I quoted the truth from Macquarie. You have invented what I did not say by using a red herring fallacy. You go to a definition of theology, which I did not provide. That wasn’t my emphasis. I provided the definition of religion as ‘a quest for the values of the ideal life’ that involved 3 practices: (1) The ideal life, (2) the practices for attaining the values of the ideal, and (3) the theology or world view relating to the quest for the environing universe (Macquarie Dictionary (1997 3rd ed. s v religion). I didn’t invent any of this in the article. It was obtained directly from Macquarie. You are inventing a straw man when you try to dissociate religion from world view. This is not ‘self-serving balderdash’ (Appeal to Ridicule Fallacy) but what a dictionary designates. It is obviously not what you like, but your analogies of things flying and things swimming do not float because I was dealing with a definition of how to pursue ‘the quest for the ideal life’ (Macquarie Dictionary). If you think things flying or swimming are a quest for the ideal life, so be it. I’m not into that kind of fantasy or speculation. You claim, ‘We are made of the same stuff as the stars’. Are you kidding? With flesh and blood? Spencer Posted by OzSpen, Friday, 22 July 2016 11:51:07 AM
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RationalRazor (Friday),
Your razor is not too sharp today with your presuppositional impositions on Christianity. This kind of statement by you is void of historical and biblical content: '"Accurate content of Christianity"? Please! Whatever could you mean? The unverifiable metaphysical claims? The fact that even Christians can't agree with each other on the basic beliefs. Was Jesus born of a virgin? IS there a Hell? Which discrepant gospel is true? DOes it not occur to you that the "accurate content" you speak of is founded upon unprovable assertions. As a well known physicist once said - unverifiable claims are "not even wrong."’ Eminent Australian historian, Christian, and former teacher of history at Macquarie University, Sydney, Dr Paul W Barnett, begs to differ with you when he investigates "Jesus and the Logic of History" (1997. Leicester, England: Apollos). His assessment is that ‘for us today and for all who have lived beyond the lifespan of Jesus, he can only be the Christ of faith. Nevertheless, that those who lived after the first Easter were people of such faith is itself not a matter of faith but a historical fact… We stand on sure grounds of sound historical method when we reply that the Christ of the early church’s faith was, without discontinuity, the truly historical figure Jesus of Nazareth’ (Barnett 1997:35). I can cite eminent scholars who provide similar historical verification for the Old Testament. Your presuppositional rationalism and secularism seem to be standing in the way of permitting the historical method to be used to assess details about the historical Jesus. Spencer Posted by OzSpen, Friday, 22 July 2016 12:17:48 PM
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Dear George,
There is nothing new about attempts, often successful, of rulers to tame religions. It is in the perceived interest of secularists to pay the churches in order to make them docile, so they do not bite the hand that feeds them. In time, their teachings are diluted until eventually they forget God and become a social club. Regarding the collection of statistical data, for the first time in Australian history, the 2016 census will not discard the identity of those who respond. Though encrypted, it will remain available, be published in 100 years time and if not by future Erdogan-like rulers, it will most likely be broken into by hackers. Posted by Yuyutsu, Friday, 22 July 2016 12:42:45 PM
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Dear RationalRazor (Thurs),
Thank you for identifying that you are the Hugh Harris to whom I referred. I had a hunch you were that person, based on your style of writing and the content of posts. You don’t like the idea of secularism being identified as a religion. However, it’s way too late to try to convince me otherwise. Back as far as the late 1930s, there were writers identifying ‘secular religion’. I don’t like using Wikipedia as a source as it is not all that reliable. However its article on ‘secular religion’ is a starter of identification of the ideology of secular religion. See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secular_religion. As World War 2 was approaching, F A Voigt, a British journalist who opposed totalitarianism, identified Marxism and National Socialism (Nazism) as promoters of ‘secular religion’. Why? It was because of their fundamental beliefs in authoritarianism, messianic and eschatological views. Paul Vitz has identified self-worship psychology as ‘secular religion’ (Vitz 1977:145). Emilo Gentile wrote “Politics as Religion” (2006. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press). His first chapter deals with ‘secular religion’. He stated that ‘the sacralization of politics was given a further impetus during the nineteenth century by various cultural and political movements, such as romanticism, idealism, positivism, nationalism, socialism, communism, and racism, which all put forward global concepts of human existence by adopting various aspects of secular religions intent upon replacing traditional religions. These religions could be defined as religions of humanity…. Any human activity from science to history or from entertainment to sport can be invested with “secular sacredness” and become the object of a secular cult, thus constituting a “secular religion”. In politics, however, the term “secular religion” is often adopted as a synonym for civil religion or political religion…. The concept of a secular religion was therefore already in use by the thirties as a definition for the forms in which totalitarian regimes created political cults’ (Gentile 2006:xvi, 1, 2). Therefore, your views promoted in this thread, and consistent with the Rational Society of Australia’s ‘10 point plan for a secular Australia’, fits succinctly under the rubric of secular religion. Spencer Posted by OzSpen, Friday, 22 July 2016 2:09:38 PM
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"Sounds very much like secularism RationalRazor. "
No it doesn't. Think about it.
If, as it seems, you disbelieve science then you need to come up with good evidence as to why.
Think about those reasons next time you board an aeroplane, get a prescription, or buy a car. Would those reasons suffice then?