#11
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Re: this one came up at dinner...
[ QUOTE ]
It's fair to infer character from beliefs. To believe its fair to infer character from race is to be racist. [/ QUOTE ] Pithy, but pretty incomplete. While I agree with your earlier statement, do you think that you can really infer beliefs entirely from religion (or, more accurately, beliefs that are outside the spiritual context of the religion itself)? Within any given religion I think there is an incredibly wide range of behaviors and character. So to infer beliefs from religion seems quite narrow minded. Furthermore, do you think there is zero correlation between race and beliefs? I think this is pretty obviously untrue. For example, there's a high correlation between being ethnically Jewish (we can debate whether or not this is a race, but for the purposes of this argument I think it's close enough) and being a practicing Jew. This kind of leaves you in the position of having to either accept that there can be racial correlations, or that the religious correlations need not be that significant. There is clearly more basis for the religious intolerance than the racial one, but I think people are being a little smug about how high-minded they are here. |
#12
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Re: this one came up at dinner...
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] is hating someone solely due to their religion "just as bad as" being racist? [/ QUOTE ] It's fair to infer character from beliefs. To believe its fair to infer character from race is to be racist. So only a racist thinks the two are equivalent. chez [/ QUOTE ] chez, You surprised me with this one, chez. RJT |
#13
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Re: this one came up at dinner...
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] [ QUOTE ] is hating someone solely due to their religion "just as bad as" being racist? [/ QUOTE ] It's fair to infer character from beliefs. To believe its fair to infer character from race is to be racist. So only a racist thinks the two are equivalent. chez [/ QUOTE ] chez, You surprised me with this one, chez. RJT [/ QUOTE ] Why? I though you agreed that people bring their morality to their beliefs. Someone who believes I will go to hell because I don't share their belief is telling me a lot about them. Noticing someones race is telling me very little about them. Infering they are likely to have some belief or behave in a certain way because there is a correlation between people of that race and that belief/behavior is racist. Maye some confusion because by their religon, I mean what they believe not being nominally a member of some religon. chez |
#14
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Re: this one came up at dinner...
chez,
Next time someone says to you he is a Christian (and that only, which is the question), you tell me what you (can) infer. RJT |
#15
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Re: this one came up at dinner...
It's fair to infer character from beliefs.
The 9/11 hijackers were muslims who believed they were doing God's work. Personally, I think it's as bad as being a racist to infer that *all* muslims share similar character traits with those 19. |
#16
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Re: this one came up at dinner...
Hopefully my answer to RJT meakes what I said clearer.
I don't disagree with what you say but I didn't say anything different. I wasn't suggesting the inference from belief to character is reliable or strong but it does exist and refers directly to the person who has the beliefs. and I'm not suggesting there is no correlation between race an beliefs, but what do you mean by racist if you don't mean judging an individual by a supposed correlation between their race and some belief. [ QUOTE ] [ QUOTE ] ... but I think people are being a little smug about how high-minded they are here. [/ QUOTE ] [/ QUOTE ] I was being judgemental at all, so I'm not sure where any mindedness comes in, let alone highness of it. chez |
#17
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Re: this one came up at dinner...
Is everyone here happy with the idea of inferring certain traits but knowing you won't always be right.
X just makes Y more likely. It is perfectly logical to generalise, insurance company's do it all the time to maximise profit and efficiency. It doesn't mean, as someone suggested, that show me two Christians and I expect they will have the same personalities. It does mean I can make certain guesses about their personalities that maybe correct and are worthwhile assuming with no other information. |
#18
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Re: this one came up at dinner...
[ QUOTE ]
It's fair to infer character from beliefs. The 9/11 hijackers were muslims who believed they were doing God's work. Personally, I think it's as bad as being a racist to infer that *all* muslims share similar character traits with those 19. [/ QUOTE ] I agree, you miunderstood if you think I said anything to the contrary. chez |
#19
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Re: this one came up at dinner...
[ QUOTE ]
chez, Next time someone says to you he is a Christian (and that only, which is the question), you tell me what you (can) infer. RJT [/ QUOTE ] very little, but if he tells me what his relious beliefs are I would infer quite a lot. chez |
#20
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Re: this one came up at dinner...
The point is that either both are acceptable or both aren't. I think the natural course of action is to make generalizations (which is pretty difficult to avoid) but be flexible in reassessing them based on your interactions with particular people.
Your style and phrasing were awfully provocative for somebody who is non-judgmental in this matter. I also think you're trying to weasel out a bit here; it's pretty clear that the point of this thread was snap judgments based on religious identification, rather than an assessment of people's character based on knowledge of their specific beliefs, which are quite different things. |
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