17th Angel
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Didn't P off any atheists... Just made a few look at you like.... "wtf?"
Didn't P off any atheists..
lolz, I am sure no one can match your avatars in that department.Just made a few look at you like.... "wtf?"
The aim to just cause aggro? Must be a muslim trait eh? (see the irony in that statement.)
Have you ever heard of the term "paying lip service" ???
dun see any Irony... just a desperate plea for attention,
hmm .... must be an Alex trait
DOUBLE SNAP!!!!
.The evidence is contained in the study itself. The statistical phenomenon (in IQ scales) of the "average" vs. "rebels" is reflected in religious AND non-religious societies alike. Why would that be unless the issue was not religion but tradition? And if that is the case, then that basically means that it is not belief in religion which is the deciding factor, but belief in TRADITION. Is it really that complicated?
It really isn't.Perhaps it is that complicated,
This fact that you are so casually dismissing is the WHOLE GAME.So belief in tradition is a factor? So what?
(correction, I said they are likely to be agnostic, not atheist, but still, let's move on)because I still don't see how this leads to the conclusion that most religious people don't actually believe in the existence of God.
That is the only reason I started the thread (to piss off the atheists who used the study to deride religion).
Code, surely you know it is an issue to discussion if you believe the admission that you believe this is a valid reason to start a thread in this forum.
I think I came across a thread here a while back which cited (the now famous) Stankov study which calculated that atheists tend to have higher IQs than those of believers.
It is probably safe to presume that most people in Muslim countries become Muslim, but without the data I wouldn't jump to that conclusion. As for people in China, I certainly would not presume automatically they are all atheist, or even predominantly atheist, without the statistical data.Why is it that people who are usually born in Muslim countries
usually become Muslim? Why is it that people born in China,
usually become atheist?
You think that the people in Muslim countries are different at
any cognitive level then the people in China at birth? If not,
then the deciding factor HAS to be tradition.
Without even realizing it, the sniping going back and forth only serves to highlight and illustrate exactly what I am getting at. You are both right...in your own minds. Does that make either one of you intelligent? I don't think so, but that is my bias, from which I would say that if there is any genuine intelligence displayed here, it is by those able to discuss this without immediately degrading into a parody of a schoolyard brawl in print.
"Never argue with a fool, onlookers may not be able to tell the difference."
~Author unknown, attributed to Mark Twain
... are you serious?It is probably safe to presume that most people in Muslim countries become Muslim, but without the data I wouldn't jump to that conclusion. As for people in China, I certainly would not presume automatically they are all atheist, or even predominantly atheist, without the statistical data.
WoW.... you are actually serious...Even *if* these were valid presumptions,
You do realize that the opening post in the thread said exactly the same thing as you just stated, rite? The point of the article was that there is no correlation between intelligence and traditional stances. Did you even read the article?let us consider for a moment the impact of politics / government and culture / society / tribe / family. Could it possibly be that these people, and indeed pretty much any people, are a product of their culture / society and government / politics? Regardless of intellegence?
You are re-stating the obvious. If you think this topic is about the validity"IQ tests" have repeatedly been shown to be biased, so any attempt to establish a baseline for intelligence is already biased from the start...be it atheist or "believer," liberal or conservative developing and administering the test. So there is a certain bias and bigoted stance implied by the question...but that doesn't make the question without merit, because it challenges the opposing biased and bigoted stance.
It is said Einstein was a brilliant man...I doubt anybody here would say he had any less than a high IQ...but he routinely would forget to tie his own shoelaces.
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@ Eudaimonist
geeeez dude, do I have to explain everything???
Why is it that people who are usually born in Muslim countries
usually become Muslim? Why is it that people born in China,
usually become atheist?
You think that the people in Muslim countries are different at
any cognitive level then the people in China at birth? If not,
then the deciding factor HAS to be tradition.
In fact, the conclusion also states that the few people (with "high IQs") who "convert" are
mostly doing it out of a rejection of tradition and not out of sincere
belief
Tell me, how many Jews and Christians do you know who have actually
read the Old Testament?
How else could you
possible explain the uniformity of religious values according to which
family/geography a person ends up being born in?
Well, it isn't traditionalism as such, but the environment to which one was exposed. If this is what you mean by tradition, I agree.
Catch 22Because that is what they come to honestly believe, given the cultural influences. That doesn't make them agnostic.
I already said that there may be many genuine believers who have not read their scriptures. I also said that there may be many posers who have read their scriptures. You are missing my point on this issue.What does this have to do with belief? Christians and Jews who don't read the Old Testament may believe just as passionately in the existence of God as people who are avid readers of the Old Testament.
Two problems. You seem to be using the words tradition and religion synonymously. Secondly, it does imply exactly that. Especially when you consider how they ended up as Jews, Muslims, Christians, Hindus, Buddhists etc. to begin with (i.e by being born into it).Yes, they may not be emotionally tied to tradition, and so they feel free to examine their beliefs, possibly leading to a change. This doesn't imply that they were never believers to begin with.
This was never my point. I reject most tradition myself, but I do not see myself as insincere to religion. My qualms are with organized religion (i.e. tradition), which is, to me, almost synonymous with society itself.I also don't see how rejecting tradition necessarily means insincerity. One may reject the authority of tradition, and by implication one is leading a self-reflective life.