Stubby wrote:Atheism is a religion like abstinence is a sex position.

Totally stealing that!
Stubby wrote:Atheism is a religion like abstinence is a sex position.
If religion wants to keep lying the government has no business telling it it can't, but it also has no business teaching false religion full of lies in school. The government is not responsible for supporting the lies religionists choose to tell their children. If the religionists are worried about it they should make their religions stop lying.Stubby wrote:Getting back to topic
Should the government be allowed to tell americans that their religion is wrong? Even if the science is demonstrably true?
Full attribution goes to Bill Maher or his writers.Schneibster wrote:Stubby wrote:Atheism is a religion like abstinence is a sex position.
Totally stealing that!
There real question is: do you have an issue what the wording etc.? For me, Gallup is a respectable polling organization.ladajo wrote:Thanks.Stubby wrote:This is for their last survey.ladajo wrote:I was wondering about the Gallup surveys that were cited. I went to the link but didnot find an obvious methodology statement.
Makes me suspect of the scope.
Survey Methods
Results for this USA Today/Gallup poll are based on telephone interviews conducted May 10-13, 2012, with a random sample of 1,012 adults, aged 18 and older, living in all 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia.
For results based on the total sample of national adults, one can say with 95% confidence that the maximum margin of sampling error is ±4 percentage points.
Interviews are conducted with respondents on landline telephones and cellular phones, with interviews conducted in Spanish for respondents who are primarily Spanish-speaking. Each sample includes a minimum quota of 400 cell phone respondents and 600 landline respondents per 1,000 national adults, with additional minimum quotas among landline respondents by region. Landline telephone numbers are chosen at random among listed telephone numbers. Cell phone numbers are selected using random-digit-dial methods. Landline respondents are chosen at random within each household on the basis of which member had the most recent birthday.
Samples are weighted by gender, age, race, Hispanic ethnicity, education, region, adults in the household, and phone status (cell phone only/landline only/both, cell phone mostly, and having an unlisted landline number). Demographic weighting targets are based on the March 2011 Current Population Survey figures for the aged 18 and older non-institutionalized population living in U.S. telephone households. All reported margins of sampling error include the computed design effects for weighting and sample design.
In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of public opinion polls.
Do you see any issue with question wording and practicial difficulties possibly introducing error or bias? How about that 60% of the survey was done via landline. What demographic group is primarily represented in landlines? How about the "weighting"? How is this done and on what basis? What is the methodology for that?
I have none, especially after finding a majority of climate deniers and evolution deniers on the fusion web site. The US has gone insane. Nearly half of us are psychotics who believe their imaginary friends in the sky are giving them instructions. And of those half think he/she/it told them to hate black people. And all of them think gay sex is icky.Stubby wrote:Do you have difficulty believing so many americans believe that Adam & Eve and Noah and the Ark to be actual historical events?
Well, I would say they are two different categories.Do you have difficulty believing so many americans believe that Adam & Eve and Noah and the Ark to be actual historical events?
This surprises me.ladajo wrote:Well, I would say they are two different categories.Do you have difficulty believing so many americans believe that Adam & Eve and Noah and the Ark to be actual historical events?
Adam & Eve, at best, is mythology.
Noah and the Ark, at best, may be based in actual events, that then took on Mythological portense. It would not be the first time that an actual event was co-opted, embelished, re-conceptualized for utility in another context. Read much history lately? One of my Russian friends likes to borrow a quote, "In history, if you take away all the lies and half-truths, you will more than likely be left with no history."
I don't know many folks that categorically state Adam & Eve are the no shit. Most I know say more or less it is mythology, some may say that it is based in truth, but re-interpreted.
I can say for sure that I have met very few folks in my life full on believing Adam & Eve.
I think so. I think there is a pretty clear evolutionary psychology case for it, in fact. It goes back a long way, too; chimps, gorillas, and orangutans form tribes, in the case of chimps, our closest living relatives, extra-familial. Many monkeys do likewise, and even exchange guard duty when they're at a known resource, turn and turn about, like water or a tree full of fruit, where predators might likewise gather. So there's plenty of source for such instincts.paperburn1 wrote:Could all this be attributed to the need to belong.
Most people belong to many groups. Companies, at least good ones, are groups. Families are groups. Most US citizens belong to at least one of each.paperburn1 wrote:More recently in Western society, this is not necessarily the case. Most people no longer belong to tribes, but they still protect those in their groups and still have a desire to belong in groups. Looking at groups in general, visual cues to establish identity prevail. Bikers look like bikers, cowboys look like cowboy even though the need to dress in that fashion is no longer necessary. Gays have several distinct looks . The list goes on and on, hipsters yuppies even groups with no outward identity still tend to gather together. The true lone wolf does not exist in any society by definition.
And fear of the unknown.paperburn1 wrote:Could all this be attributed to the need to belong. Abraham Maslow suggested that the need to belong was a major source of human motivation. He thought that it was one of 8 basic needs,In the past belonging to a group was essential to survival. People hunted and cooked in groups. Belonging to a group allowed tribe members to share the workload and protect each other. Not only were they trying to ensure their own survival, but all members of their tribe were invested in each other's outcomes because each member played an important role in the group. More recently in Western society, this is not necessarily the case. Most people no longer belong to tribes, but they still protect those in their groups and still have a desire to belong in groups. Looking at groups in general, visual cues to establish identity prevail. Bikers look like bikers, cowboys look like cowboy even though the need to dress in that fashion is no longer necessary. Gays have several distinct looks . The list goes on and on, hipsters yuppies even groups with no outward identity still tend to gather together. The true lone wolf does not exist in any society by definition.
The religion memeplex uses all sorts of nasty ovipositors. Go check out Sphex wasps for the sort of thing I'm talking about. Or watch any of the Alien movies. For example the altruism trick. Psychologically, it's nuclear weapons. Really nasty stuff. Emotional blackmail on an industrial basis. Then there's the sex trick, long noted. Then the curiosity trick. Plenty more too.Stubby wrote:And fear of the unknown.paperburn1 wrote:Could all this be attributed to the need to belong. Abraham Maslow suggested that the need to belong was a major source of human motivation. He thought that it was one of 8 basic needs,In the past belonging to a group was essential to survival. People hunted and cooked in groups. Belonging to a group allowed tribe members to share the workload and protect each other. Not only were they trying to ensure their own survival, but all members of their tribe were invested in each other's outcomes because each member played an important role in the group. More recently in Western society, this is not necessarily the case. Most people no longer belong to tribes, but they still protect those in their groups and still have a desire to belong in groups. Looking at groups in general, visual cues to establish identity prevail. Bikers look like bikers, cowboys look like cowboy even though the need to dress in that fashion is no longer necessary. Gays have several distinct looks . The list goes on and on, hipsters yuppies even groups with no outward identity still tend to gather together. The true lone wolf does not exist in any society by definition.
Teahive wrote:Diogenes wrote:Apathetic or militant Atheism inspires no great passion to attack an invading religion. Such will be utterly helpless, ergo such will be converted or eradicated.
European ennui towards Christianity is slowly being transformed into European acceptance and dominance by Islam.
So militant atheists aren't zealots?
I think you're discounting the mechanisms by which people become atheists or agnostics.
Resistance doesn't need a common religion. Just a common enemy.Diogenes wrote:Not zealots in the crusading sense. Oh, they'll run their mouths a lot, and maybe carry protest signs, but will they form into battalions and charge the Islamists with their swords? Not a chance.
That's not my point. Please don't present it as such.GIThruster wrote:While that's true, I think Teahive's point that it is the atheists who are always picking the disputes is correct.