EDIT: long post warning
katie_tully said:
K. Cept this isn't Northern Ireland, Australia's circumstances are completely removed from that of Nthern Irelands and religious distention in this country has thus far, for the majority, been a reflection of outside influences. Not because kids are learning that Noah took two of every animal on a boat and sailed around for a while.
Of course it's not like NI, lol. But at the core of religion, particularly the 2 monotheisms, is the belief that you have the absolute truth about the universe, and everyone else should have to believe the same thing. So there's always some latent potential for religious movements to appear, like "jesus camp" in America (something you might be able to imagine actually happening here, perhaps). To use another example which I don't think Australia is like, the rise of more radical Islam in its present form only occurred over the last century
For the main part the problem is that while the texts say what they do it's not a good idea to promote or respect the belief that these are the words of the all powerful creator and dictator of the universe, because people's beliefs tend to be a powerful determinant of how they interpret the world and how they act (anti-semitism, yo).
katie_tully said:
Well what is the point of having religious ed and going 'lol k guys, this didnt really happen'?. That's a bit dumb. So what if the kids want to believe that there is an element of truth in Bible stories? At the end of the day it's up to the parents as to whether the kid gets any religious education, and it's up to the parents to discuss with their children whether these stories are fictious. Just because you've deduced (from what source) that hardly anybody cares about religion anymore doesn't mean we should suddenly be bombarding school age kids with anti religious material.
I think it's against what education should be to tell children something that no reasonable adult could believe is true. Obviously I'm happy with simplified versions of knowledge for understanding at the appropriate level before you pick me up on that, but something blatantly false is different. Now I did not say at all that less people being strongly religious in Australia is why we should protect children from religion, I'd tend to think the same way if all of us went to church every sunday (ignoring the obvious possibility that I'd be religious myself in such as society).
All my carrying on about Russell's teapot was pretty much just to show that I'm equally against anything
irrational in school, but there's a lot of irrational things we don't need to protect children against because no one advocates them in the first place. Religion shouldn't be privileged just because it's more prevalent than any other random nonsense you could make up.
At the present time it's actually not much at all up to parents what sort of maths or science they learn, and as I said before there are anti-racism programs in schools whose students have extremely racist parents. Too bad for them, they don't deserve to have their opinions respected. Hopefully that makes it clearer what I meant too
Actually I should add to that, that the stories themselves have a lot of cultural value, obviously you can't understand a lot of art and literature from western history without knowing about the Bible. Doesn't make them any more true.
tully said:
The book they are proposing is not 'scientific method'. It's a bullshit book that pits religions against each other and would leave an already confused chlild more fucked up.
I'd have to have a look at it. I don't think that being derisive towards the preachers of the 3 monotheisms is a useful thing to do really. One of the reasons I'd like to see children protected against religion is obviously the conflict you get from believing other people are evil for not believing the dogmas that you do. So this book might for example get a-religious kids making fun of kids who hold in high esteem any of those 3 kinds of preachers.
katie_tully said:
I believe they're called Utopias. They don't exist
Never have.
No of course not but does that mean it's acceptable to say "well, you hate asians, that's the opinion your parents taught you and we respect it"?
katie_tully said:
Why do we have to tell children there is no God? That's such a fucking ridiculous idea. Let them believe there is a god, and once they're old enough to critically analyse the logistics behind such a being THEN they can decide for themselves.
Well from an educational point of view I'm not 100% certain how I'd want to do it at this stage. Firstly I'd start by banning preachers from schools (and schools from preachers). But for me that's not enough because as I said in my first post there's still parents, peers and the community pushing religion on people. At primary school level you could have something like distinguishing myths (greek myths, biblical myths, other myths, they're all interesting for kids without being true) from history as discovered by evidence. Similarly you can distinguish BS (astrology, magic...) from sciences and why they're different.
At the very least if they're going to believe there's a god we need protection from psychological abuse such as telling children the grotesque descriptions of hell as a real place, that they or their family and friends could go to. Worse still is the idea that not believing in dogmas that are patently false will send them there. There are still schools and also Sunday schools where they hear this.
Just to digress a little before coming back to that, in year 8 I remember clearly we had a talk from a religious group that elaborated for about an hour the enormous diversity and complexity of biological life on earth and also the vastness and mystery of the universe. At the end of this I was left helpless to believe them when they said "...so, god did it!". It was very powerful, at least for a 12 year old.
So in secondary level we need to draw a distinction between theories generated by scientific enquiry, and non-theories generated by making something up. I think getting this idea leads to realising that a statement given without evidence can be dismissed without evidence, and from the myths vs history before it becomes clear that of the 1000 religions in the world they all fall into the former category.
I don't think we'd need to rampantly chase out all possibility of belief in a deity, I can't imagine systematically examining students for symptoms of deism and making them write lines that say "God DNE" at lunchtime. I'm not a nazi, lol.
If there's no God, we may as well just fuck Christmas and Easter off as well.
Not at all, you can go to a Buddhist temple to celebrate Tết (Vietnamese new year, it's today so I used it) and practice all the traditions without the superstitious doctrines. You know quite well that xmas and easter were originally pagan celebrations which were probably appropriated from even older celebrations before that. Like I said before about the value of bible stories, people can preserve, appreciate and practice their traditions without having to believe something that in the 21st century is both obviously wrong and potentially dangerous