1. The Theology board is open to discussion of all traditions. The term 'theology' does not disclude non-theist traditions.
2. The purpose of the board is to discuss matters of doctrine, not personal opinion, and to seek the truth of what the doctrine states, not one's opinion about what doctrine states.
3. Questions, statements, assertions, etc., need to be supported by relevant primary and secondary references. So a question beginning "So-and-so's doctrine says that ... " is a statement that needs to be qualified, however, one could say, "As I understand it ... " without qualification, if seeking clarification.
4. The Theology board should follow accepted scholarly metholology: two sources are better than one, and more makes the case stronger. A position founded on a single 'authority' is weak for precisely that reason — one person could be wrong. (On my course, referencing wikipedia can actually cost marks).
5. Rather than focus on authorities, it's better to discuss ideas, and whether or not an idea is supported within a given tradition, and why.
6. Whilst following the general rules of the peer-review method, academics are not saints, however the Theology board will endeavour so long-running and public arguments is insufficient reason to pursue such practice here.
7. No doubt some will cry censorship. This is refuted for two reasons. The first, and most obvious, is that there is plenty of room on IO to air your opinions or put your point of view. The second is that discussions are often 'censored' by the vehemence by which people are attacked for their views, or the way in which threads are carried off-topic into areas of someone's won choosing. So let's endeavour to keep it civil at all times.
Thomas
2. The purpose of the board is to discuss matters of doctrine, not personal opinion, and to seek the truth of what the doctrine states, not one's opinion about what doctrine states.
3. Questions, statements, assertions, etc., need to be supported by relevant primary and secondary references. So a question beginning "So-and-so's doctrine says that ... " is a statement that needs to be qualified, however, one could say, "As I understand it ... " without qualification, if seeking clarification.
4. The Theology board should follow accepted scholarly metholology: two sources are better than one, and more makes the case stronger. A position founded on a single 'authority' is weak for precisely that reason — one person could be wrong. (On my course, referencing wikipedia can actually cost marks).
5. Rather than focus on authorities, it's better to discuss ideas, and whether or not an idea is supported within a given tradition, and why.
6. Whilst following the general rules of the peer-review method, academics are not saints, however the Theology board will endeavour so long-running and public arguments is insufficient reason to pursue such practice here.
7. No doubt some will cry censorship. This is refuted for two reasons. The first, and most obvious, is that there is plenty of room on IO to air your opinions or put your point of view. The second is that discussions are often 'censored' by the vehemence by which people are attacked for their views, or the way in which threads are carried off-topic into areas of someone's won choosing. So let's endeavour to keep it civil at all times.
Thomas