I guarantee you the Pope of that era still hates on LGBTQ people serving in Starfleet and sends out subspace podcasts denouncing them to serving personnel, who conflict with each other on it.
Eh maybe not, considering how some churches are starting to acknowledge gay marriage now, by 2150 we'll probably have a more progressive Pope.
It would just create new, violent disagreements on right and wrong. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.
If we need to have a reference to the Pope in Star Trek, I'd like it to contain the words: 'the Pope and her wife..."Eh maybe not, considering how some churches are starting to acknowledge gay marriage now, by 2150 we'll probably have a more progressive Pope.
If we need to have a reference to the Pope in Star Trek, I'd like it to contain the words: 'the Pope and her wife..."
Two more articles:
http://www.patheos.com/blogs/camels...theism-rates-correlate-with-education-levels/
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/s...analysis-of-scores-of-scientific-8758046.html
"A piece of University of Rochester analysis, led by Professor Miron Zuckerman, found “a reliable negative relation between intelligence and religiosity” in 53 out of 63 studies."
Do I need to link all those studies individually or this good enough?
I can see why the writers kept away from reflecting future Earth its too contentious. In my fanon religious belief still exists among any human who desire to practise their belief and they are free to do so as long as said belief does not infringe on the rights of others. You want to believe its wrong to be gay, or marry 'outside your race', fine as long as your buisness practices reflect the rule of law. If you don't like the rule of law, go find a colony where you can be as religious and discriminatory as you like. But don't expect Starfleet or the Federation to protect you from the Klingons.A triumph of reason over superstition. It is not western concept, merely that development is further in some western counties (USA is notably lagging behind.) As the level of education and standards of living improve world wide, other countries will follow the pattern.
I do not practice religion. However, I wouldn't call myself an atheist, either.
Even though I do not practice religion, I really have no idea whether or not there is a God. Heck, if I could prove there is or isn't a God, I think I'd be one of the most famous people in history. I can say "logic and critical thinking tells me there probably isn't a God", but It would be very presumptuous and pretentious of me to act as if my logic and critical thought necessarily = reality.
So alas, I cannot prove it (prove it to other people or even prove it to myself) one way or the other, and I'm relegated to finding out for sure (or not finding out, as the case may be) only when I die.
At that point, I'll either say to myself ...."Hey, there really is a God" or I'll say....... " ".
Yeah. That's basically being an Atheist. I can't prove that there is no intangible, invisible hippo on my balcony either, but unless some magical hippo poop suddenly emerges, I'm gonna assume it's not there. For some reason people seem to apply this weird level of disproof requirement to God that they don't apply to other things. Normally people assume things do not exist unless there is some specific reason to assume that they do.I do not practice religion. However, I wouldn't call myself an atheist, either.
Even though I do not practice religion, I really have no idea whether or not there is a God. Heck, if I could prove there is or isn't a God, I think I'd be one of the most famous people in history. I can say "logic and critical thinking tells me there probably isn't a God", but It would be very presumptuous and pretentious of me to act as if my logic and critical thought necessarily = reality.
It feels like someone is furiously searching Google....The first article is not sourced at all, just a vague reference to the pew research center, which I'm familiar with, but no link is provided.
The second one is well sourced, but draws a very generalized conclusion about religiosity, which is subjective on its own and says nothing about a belief in gods.
One of those 60 sources could offer something substantive to the discussion, but you keep avoiding primary sources and just throw out interpretations of summaries of actual studies, with the latter remaining largely unknown.
I don't believe in a god because it isn't useful to believe in it.
In the Star Trek universe it takes the 'invasion' of aliens for humans to question and change the path they are on. Its a bit hard to argue certain beliefs from a fundamental perspective when you have a galaxy of sentient aliens whose lifestyle is nowhere near yours. Preaching 'Adam and Eve is more righteous than Adam and Steve' would leave an Andorian family rolling with laughter. According to canon it takes 4 sexes to make an Andorian marriage. Having a belief that woman are weaker than men, and having her drive a shuttle should not be allowed, when a Vulcan female can probably lift the strongest human male and not bat an inner eyelid would make your culture look ridiculous.You don't think that maybe these institutions being round for about between 2 to 7 thousand years in some cases means even with this trend it's going to take a lot more than 140 odd years to suddenly go away?
I do not practice religion. However, I wouldn't call myself an atheist, either.
Even though I do not practice religion, I really have no idea whether or not there is a God. Heck, if I could prove there is or isn't a God, I think I'd be one of the most famous people in history. I can say "logic and critical thinking tells me there probably isn't a God", but It would be very presumptuous and pretentious of me to act as if my logic and critical thought necessarily = reality.
So alas, I cannot prove it (prove it to other people or even prove it to myself) one way or the other, and I'm relegated to finding out for sure (or not finding out, as the case may be) only when I die.
At that point, I'll either say to myself ...."Hey, there really is a God" or I'll say....... " ".
According to canon it takes 4 sexes to make an Andorian marriage.
True, but if someone else says they believe in a mystical God who cannot be proven or dis-proven, who am I to be so presumptuous as to think I know everything about the universe and tell them they are wrong.Yeah. That's basically being an Atheist. I can't prove that there is no intangible, invisible hippo on my balcony either, but unless some magical hippo poop suddenly emerges, I'm gonna assume it's not there. For some reason people seem to apply this weird level of disproof requirement to God that they don't apply to other things. Normally people assume things do not exist unless there is some specific reason to assume that they do.
It will be sooner than that, it was not long ago the Anglican church made loads of money on the slave trade....The current one just called the acceptance of people like me "terrible" for the world. So I'll give it about another 800 years.
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