Well, Dogma has now doubled down and what we thought he was implying turned out to be precisely what he was implying.
I don't know what posts you have been reading, but it sure weren't mine.
I've always talked about
likely and
probability.
At no point have I expressed certainties.
My point has always been that the statistics don't apply to individual cases.
The thing about statistics and individuals, is that they allow for probability.
If the statistics show that 8 out of 10 stick to the religion of their parents, then if you meet a random religious individual, then 8 chances out of 10, he's following the religion of his parents.
Do you disagree with that?
And you would be guessing wrong even with yourself, seeing as how you are neither Christian nor Muslim. So perhaps this is not the sort of approach you should be pushing.
I'm by definition already the exception to the rule, since my parents don't share the same religion. Also, it seems you've missed the part where I also explicitly qualified that if it concerns a
religious person. It is true I didn't qualify that every time I had to repeat it.
But I did certainly mention it. I also said that I think that more often then not, if someone abbandons the religion of their upbringing, chances are bigger that they'll abbandon religion altogether instead of converting to some other foreign religion. Especially in the secular west.
However, if I would have been religious, surely most likely I would have been muslim or christian - not a hindu or scientologist or whatever.
And to top it off, my example actually also confirms my general point here...
because I was never indoctrinated into a religion.
My point is that religious belief is more often then not a
learned behaviour starting in very early childhood. Nobody learned me a religion. Specifically because my parents didn't share a religion. Baptising me wouldn't have been fair towards my dad and his family. Circumsizing me wouldn't have been fair towards my mom and her family. So they did neither.
This is also why they put me in a secular public school instead of a christian or islamic school.
I was never instructed a religion. If I was, chances would be big that I'ld be religious. And that religion would have most likely been the one spoonfed to me during childhood.
I can't believe that you folks are arguing this point.
I really can't.
I don't know that it's true. I have no idea why my own family's nominal Christianity, combined with random Eastern beliefs, determined that my own beliefs would be Christian. If you were arguing that someone who was brought up in a strict religious household would be likely to end up that religion, I would agree with you, but you are going much further than that. You are tossing the whole post-Christian crowd into your statistics because our parents loosely identified as Christian, even if they barely practiced it and did not teach it.
/facepalm
Obviously my point is not about parents that don't indoctrinate their kids into a religion they barely believe in themselves..........................
For crying out loud...
People don't learn religious beliefs by osmosis simply because their parents happen to identify with a particular religion.
I identify with judeo-christian culture, because I grew up in judeo-christian culture.
That doesn't make me a christian believer.
If my parents would have baptised me, send me to sunday school, made me read the bible and dragged me to mass every sunday from the day I was born onwards, it would be a different story - as you agree to.
So what are you objecting to, really?
If you randomly decided to embrace Christianity at some point, it would obviously not be because your mother was Christian, so you need to fix your position to account for that type of situation
Nothing I said excludes people from changing, abbandoning or joining a religion at some point in their lives, regardless of what their parents believe.
My point is about what the majority does.
Otherwise you're simply wrong. You're assuming a correlation between religion of the parent and the actual intentional transmission of that religion that you should know from experience doesn't always apply.
No. I'm assuming a correlation between someone's religious beliefs and
the religion they were indoctrinated into from birth onwards.
My point has nothing to do with people who were not indoctrinated into a religion.
Eventhough I could also make a case about how those people who weren't indoctrinated and end up in one religion or another anyway, did so under influence of their immediate environment (friends or family or whatever).
People who convert to a religion
purely by reading about it, while knowing nobody who practicing that religion... I don't think you'll meet them often.
If you developed your method here to be more flexible to various circumstances, I would probably agree with the conclusion, but right now it is simplistic to the point of being obviously fallacious.
Either I'm not making myself clear (which I doubt, but it could be), or the lot of you are just skimming over my post and adding things between the lines or whatever.
I'm talking about rather specific circumstances. And that is those people that are indoctrinated into a religion from birth onwards.
Obviously, parents that barely believe themselves, don't go to church and perhaps don't even own any bibles or whatever, are not the subject of discussion here.
This is literally ethnic profiling. How can you not see that this is ethnic profiling?
Perhaps, but it doesn't bother me at all. Because it's correct.
A Morrocon who is religious and living in Antwerp, is most likely a muslim.
A native Belgian who is religious and living in Antwerp, is most likely a christian catholic.
It's just how it is. It's culture. And it is past on from one generation to the next.
There's a district in Antwerp called Borgerhout. It's nicknamed Borgerroco, because many of Morrocon descend live there. There are quite a few mosques there. The amount of mosques concentrated in that distinct, is no surprise to me at all. Apparantly, it is to you?
Honestly, I would assume secular
Secular, is not a religion.
It's a political construct where government and religion stay out of eachother's business.
I'm a secularist and an atheist.
Brahim, a morrocon living accross the street of me, is a secular muslim.
The pastor of our village, a catholic, is a secular christian.
unless someone is wearing religious symbols or actually says or does something to give away their religion. I would not be surprised if the answer were Muslim or Oriental Orthodox, but I don't really go around trying to guess what religion people are because of their names. That's bizarre in the extreme.
I don't spend my time guessing people's religions.
I'm just saying, if you have to guess, and assuming the person in question is religious, then I say that more often then not, you can guess correctly purely based on their cultural background.
And I'm still baffled that you people are arguing that point.
A religious person of Morrocan descend with the name Mohammed who has muslim parents, and you're telling me you can't guess what his religion most likely is?
Be serious.