@ v,
If you do not believe that education and exposure allows one to see things differently than ignorance... I can't answer your question.
i think that you can't answer my question because you can't justify your axioms. my question has nothing to do with beliefs or, for that matter, this re-framed/rephrased question here which you are posing.
you didn't initially make the claim that exposure and education would allow one to see things differently, you're moving the goal posts here. you made the initial claim that exposure to new ideas equated to tolerance/respect of those ideas, an idea you called "harmony". i've asked you repeatedly to explain to me how education and exposure to new ideas equates to tolerance/respect for those ideas.
rather than answering my question you are, at this point in our conversation, suggesting that the reason i don't understand what you are saying is because i don't have belief...in education? i'm sure i believe in education, Wil. i'm also quite sure that being educated about $cientology does not make one respect their beliefs.
on a personal note, i have copies of all of those books on my bookshelves. are you suggesting that my reading of them as produced a level of respect and tolerance for the ideas which they espouse? it very much seems that way.
I did notice that you chose to not respond to my simple scenario.
perhaps you missed it in the original reply. i'll repost it here for your convenience:
"as for your scenario. i have no way of knowing which of those groups of people is more or less tolerant of differing ideas though, apparently, you do and that is after all what i'm asking you to explain to me. "
however, the fact that you've changed questions in what you are asking me would lead me to answer differently. clearly, the group that is educated and exposed to more ideas is educated and exposed to more ideas than the group which is uneducated and not exposed to as many ideas.
shifting goal posts aside, that doesn't answer the question which i asked you namely, how is it that being educated regarding the views of another religion, for instance, or philosophical school et al. leads to respect for the views advocated by those groups/institutions/religions/philosophies et al?
of course the implication there is that if one doesn't agree that being educated regarding other points of view then one actually isn't educated about it and conversely that people that are uneducated about other religious traditions are unable to generate respect or tolerance for other religious traditions, for instance. if that is your view it would be helpful to simply say it as such.
i feel fairly well educated about most of the world religious traditions and whilst anyone can believe whatever they want i don't have tolerance or respect for a great many of the views advocated by those religious traditions. i feel that i've demonstrated a fair degree of understanding of the basic tenets of religions which i've discussed, i've spent years studying them or participating in them and my experience, Wil, is that education doesn't lead to tolerance and acceptance. abhorrent ideas are abhorrent regardless of how educated one is about them or their provenance.