AndyDufresne wrote:daddy1gringo wrote:comic boy wrote:...there is no evidence whatsoever that a certificate or religious blessing improves parenting skills.
Staying together in a stable, loving relationship improves parenting skills.
Improving parenting skills (something active) seems like a stretch, but improving the atmosphere (something more passive) for any children growing up seems more in line.
That was kind of a sound-byte response to what comic boy said. Though my long-term stable, loving relationship with my wife has indeed improved my parenting skills, as I hope it has hers, you're right, that is not the point. The point is that the stable, loving relationship itself, which is what this thread is about, makes a huge difference for the children.
Upgrayedd wrote:This is a bunch of sophistry. "Certificates and religious blessings"? No those don't improve parenting skills. But paternal guidance and Christian values do. With no-fault divorce and rejection of Christian faith we've seen a decline in both of those things. Welcome to the world of thug lyfe, school shootings and emasculated man-children who never grew up.
Ethics can be decoupled from religion. One of course can still be be a helpful and good citizen or parent, using moral philosophy in general.
--Andy
upgrayedd specifically mentioned "Christian values", I just said this:
daddy1gringo wrote:...the skyrocketing divorce rate is a result of "secularization", that is, society turning away from God, but government doesn't have a lot to do with it.
Edit: inb4 -- and yes, the divorce rate among "Christians" is little or no better because "Christians" in general have also turned away from God and become "me" centered.
Now face it, 50 years ago when divorce was a rarity and society wasn't as generally sick, the prevailing "non-secular" thing in the U.S. (and western European culture) was Christianity, so "secularization" meant moving away from that. I suppose Jewish people becoming more secularized also contributed to the ills of society, but if the Zoroastrians and Thor worshipers have become more secularized, I doubt that has had much effect on the national divorce rate.
Yes, obviously, it is theoretically possible to abandon Christianity, or any religious belief, and yet to live a non-me-centered philosophy. For the purposes of this thread, that means a philosophy that allows people to put others above themselves enough to put the marriage, your spouse, the children, and your given word before the fact that you don't feel happy right now, and work out your problems instead of running. It means a moral compass and anchor that you can pass on to your children where they will build up society rather than tearing it down or blowing it up.
"Ethics can be decoupled from religion" philosophically, and theoretically we should be able to do that. But the experience of the last 50 years is that as a nation, a culture, and a (human) race, we don't. That's my point, and I believe it is evidence that what we have abandoned is not so silly, outdated, and expendable as we thought.
The right answer to the wrong question is still the wrong answer to the real question.