kurt vonnegut said:
Zobel said:
Pluralism and freedom of religion are not the same as absence of them, or if their influence. You cannot scrub Christianity from the laws of this country - there won't be anything left.
Should the Christian influence on the laws and foundation of this country be used to justify religious favoritism?
this is the right tack, and it cuts right back to the discussion we have previously about values and assumptions.
the fact of the matter is, religious favoritism in the end is a matter of perspective. what you consider as "christian" aspects of our law versus "secular" is just another way of saying what has consensus culturally for us even among non-Christians or non-practicing Christians and what doesn't. i hope you can see that is not concrete at all. as consensus changes, religious vs secular changes - which means there is no actual distinction.
just as a matter of basic history it is clear no one in this country ninety years ago thought that putting the ten commandments on the supreme court building was some kind of constitutional conundrum or represented some christian theocratic statement.
what this boils down to - your question, i mean - is raw pragmatism in the form of social or political power. lenin's old "who? whom?" repackaged in the form of cultural struggle. and the only decider of that question is who has the power.
i think the answer to the previous question - the difference between secular and religious - is just consensus was entirely satisfactory.
here is no different, then. what is religious favoritism and what is just normal behavior for our society are just a matter of consensus.
what's irrational is trying to cut the legs off the ladder you're standing on, which seems to be the underlying approach here. and i don't really just mean on the matter of faith. people talk about our constitution, and it seems to me to be the exact same problem. these things are somewhere between engineered designs and organic entities, but either way both have systems and sub-systems. there are relationships between parts and wholes, and at some point if you make too many arbitrary changes things begin to fail because the system as whole is no longer coherent.
i suppose that is my bigger concern. for example there is not, to me, a material difference between the debate about same sex marriage and a debate about pedophilia. the concepts and prohibitions that are brought to bear in both cases come from one place and are
not common to our western cultural inheritance. the only difference is one of consensus - "religious" objections. that's a moving target.
and taking that a little further - expanding now that i have a moment - craigernaught's objection of essentially "i don't want that taught in school" is really just a different way of saying "i don't want to risk it being taught in a way i don't agree with / by someone who isn't of my sect". but this too just another appeal to consensus. if it was taught well, in a way that we find edifying and agreeable, we would encourage it. that's why we don't have a problem with non-parent teachers in sunday school. again this is just consensus though. plenty of people (like me) see no issue with combining the two - so-called secular and religious education. and of course this combination is more normal in western history than their separation.
and the last step here - is that there is no way to be free of bias in this regard. AGC brings this point up correctly... the right follow-up to craig's point is - who decides what is taught in school? who decides what is secular and what is religious? how do we incorporate these moral and philosophical axioms or presuppositions into non-religious law? again the simple reality is by power, which is just consensus under another name (in a notional democracy, anyway).
so the answer to your questions is: of course, if that is what the people want. we did it for decades with no problem, because that was the collective will of the people. our population has changed, and so the net vector of that collective will has changed, and so the norms and attitudes change.
y'all seem to think that by recognizing the underlying truth of these things that i'm somehow advocating for some position or another. i'm not. the problem is the double-minded thinking that there is somehow some higher motive or ideal or philosophical plane some people are operating on. where are you going to find the angels to run this pure secular system without injecting their personal biases about what should and ought be taught, or done, or made illegal?