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patches70 wrote:Separation of church and state is secularism. Those that equate it to atheism don't understand the definition of secularism.
Political decisions and matters of state decided by being unbiased by religious beliefs.
The US- Secular.
Iran- Not secular, but theocratic.



Symmetry wrote:patches70 wrote:Separation of church and state is secularism. Those that equate it to atheism don't understand the definition of secularism.
Political decisions and matters of state decided by being unbiased by religious beliefs.
The US- Secular.
Iran- Not secular, but theocratic.
I think that's pretty solid, and it's generally the way I think about it. I'm not religious, unless you count atheism as a religion, but I see secularism as a way of protecting religious belief against state control in favour of a single religious belief more than anything.







Symmetry wrote:patches70 wrote:Separation of church and state is secularism. Those that equate it to atheism don't understand the definition of secularism.
Political decisions and matters of state decided by being unbiased by religious beliefs.
The US- Secular.
Iran- Not secular, but theocratic.
I think that's pretty solid, and it's generally the way I think about it. I'm not religious, unless you count atheism as a religion, but I see secularism as a way of protecting religious belief against state control in favour of a single religious belief more than anything.























comic boy wrote:In theory rhat might be true but you need only look at the current Republican bunfights to realise that the USA is far less secular than it would like us to believe.












chang50 wrote:Symmetry wrote:patches70 wrote:Separation of church and state is secularism. Those that equate it to atheism don't understand the definition of secularism.
Political decisions and matters of state decided by being unbiased by religious beliefs.
The US- Secular.
Iran- Not secular, but theocratic.
I think that's pretty solid, and it's generally the way I think about it. I'm not religious, unless you count atheism as a religion, but I see secularism as a way of protecting religious belief against state control in favour of a single religious belief more than anything.
Yet curiously a country that has an established church,the UK is way less religious than one that has seperation of church and state the US.Could it be reasonably said the UK is less secular than the US?



Symmetry wrote:chang50 wrote:Symmetry wrote:patches70 wrote:Separation of church and state is secularism. Those that equate it to atheism don't understand the definition of secularism.
Political decisions and matters of state decided by being unbiased by religious beliefs.
The US- Secular.
Iran- Not secular, but theocratic.
I think that's pretty solid, and it's generally the way I think about it. I'm not religious, unless you count atheism as a religion, but I see secularism as a way of protecting religious belief against state control in favour of a single religious belief more than anything.
Yet curiously a country that has an established church,the UK is way less religious than one that has seperation of church and state the US.Could it be reasonably said the UK is less secular than the US?
I think that's a reasonable argument, absolutely, but that also links into my point- secular countries are good for religious belief.



everywhere116 wrote:Symmetry wrote:chang50 wrote:Symmetry wrote:patches70 wrote:Separation of church and state is secularism. Those that equate it to atheism don't understand the definition of secularism.
Political decisions and matters of state decided by being unbiased by religious beliefs.
The US- Secular.
Iran- Not secular, but theocratic.
I think that's pretty solid, and it's generally the way I think about it. I'm not religious, unless you count atheism as a religion, but I see secularism as a way of protecting religious belief against state control in favour of a single religious belief more than anything.
Yet curiously a country that has an established church,the UK is way less religious than one that has seperation of church and state the US.Could it be reasonably said the UK is less secular than the US?
I think that's a reasonable argument, absolutely, but that also links into my point- secular countries are good for religious belief.
Paradoxical, indeed.
Why do you think this is, if there is indeed a causation underneath the negative correlation?












comic boy wrote:In theory rhat might be true but you need only look at the current Republican bunfights to realise that the USA is far less secular than it would like us to believe.




















Symmetry wrote:I've had a few debates about what secularism means recently. I'm kind of curious about how you guys and gals would define it. I guess some people use it as a kind of opposite term to religious belief, but I've always seen it as a way of protecting equality of religion in the public sphere. I've never really equated it to atheism, which seems to be the way that it's being interpreted recently.
Anyway, what does secularism mean for you? What would be a secular society? And would it be a good thing?
sec·u·lar·ism (sky-l-rzm)
n.
1. Religious skepticism or indifference.
2. The view that religious considerations should be excluded from civil affairs or public education.
Definition of SECULAR
1a : of or relating to the worldly or temporal <secular concerns> b : not overtly or specifically religious <secular music> c : not ecclesiastical or clerical <secular courts> <secular landowners>
2: not bound by monastic vows or rules; specifically : of, relating to, or forming clergy not belonging to a religious order or congregation <a secular priest>
3a : occurring once in an age or a century b : existing or continuing through ages or centuries c : of or relating to a long term of indefinite duration <secular inflation>
— sec·u·lar·i·ty \ˌse-kyə-ˈla-rə-tē\ noun
— sec·u·lar·ly \ˈse-kyə-lər-lē\ adverb
















PLAYER57832 wrote: In other words, the FIRST things presented are not the objective dictionary information that one might think should show, but rather highly targeted "agenda" sites. I do not think this cooincidental.














natty dread wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote: In other words, the FIRST things presented are not the objective dictionary information that one might think should show, but rather highly targeted "agenda" sites. I do not think this cooincidental.
You're right, it's not coincidental. But probably not in the way you think...
Google (if you let it) collects information from your computer about your browsing habits, your search history, etc. and then uses it to guesstimate which search results you are likely to be most interested in. In this case, for whatever reason, google seems to think that those kinds of sites interest you the most. Maybe you've googled religion-related things recently, or visited religious sites...
That same information is also used to target advertising for you. Most of the banner ads you see are from google's ad networks, and google uses the information collected from you to decide what kind of ads to show you.
It's all very sinister, sure, but there's really no right-wing agenda here, just a make-money-for-google agenda.
















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