Going back to the episode, are oyu implying that you would have thought Picard's speech would have worked if some other character presented the opposidte point of view? That's asinine.
You have a problem with certain media having the guts to make a direct statement? You can dislike the statement all you want, but advocating that media shouldn't even have the right to do so isn't a terribly good thing to advocate.
Seems to me someone is confusing the creator's desires with the objectives of the his fictional world. GR creating a world where humanity has moved past religion is not the same thing as the UFP supressing freedom of speech or religionI like to think the idea of freedom of speech is still alive and well in the future, especially an "enlightened utopia" like the UFP is supposed to be.
There is no reason why believers should have to be shoved into a closet.
Exactly. If the Federation is so insecure that they cannot tolerate dissent, then there are some very, VERY serious underlying problems.
(Which is actually the way I tend to view the Federation: a whitewashed sepulcher, in a lot of ways.)
Not my point.Seems to me someone is confusing the creator's desires with the objectives of the his fictional world. GR creating a world where humanity has moved past religion is not the same thing as the UFP supressing freedom of speech or religionExactly. If the Federation is so insecure that they cannot tolerate dissent, then there are some very, VERY serious underlying problems.
(Which is actually the way I tend to view the Federation: a whitewashed sepulcher, in a lot of ways.)
If religious speech is "banned" or "heavily discouraged", then supression is indeed what is going on.
What would you call such actions?
Agreed. And I would add, a version of the 20th century that exist only in their head.Some people just want ANY excuse to make the Federation a living Hell just because everything isn't 100% like it is in the 20th century...
Why do you suppose religious speech was banned? Based on what evidences?Seems to me someone is confusing the creator's desires with the objectives of the his fictional world. GR creating a world where humanity has moved past religion is not the same thing as the UFP supressing freedom of speech or religionExactly. If the Federation is so insecure that they cannot tolerate dissent, then there are some very, VERY serious underlying problems.
(Which is actually the way I tend to view the Federation: a whitewashed sepulcher, in a lot of ways.)
If religious speech is "banned" or "heavily discouraged", then supression is indeed what is going on.
What would you call such actions?
I'm with Gene on this one
"I condemn false prophets, I condemn the effort to take away the power of rational decision, to drain people of their free will--and a hell of a lot of money in the bargain. Religions vary in their degree of idiocy, but I reject them all. For most people, religion is nothing more than a substitute for a malfunctioning brain."
Considering what a large part of the world's population considers itself religious... if such a huge percentage of the human race has a malfunctioning brain, according to GR, there's no freaking way that this human race could ever evolve on its own in just 400 years into such a perfect, intelligent, rational population that they're supposed to be in the 24th century Trek world, according to GR. It's biologically impossible without extensive, mass-scale genetic engineering.I'm with Gene on this one
"I condemn false prophets, I condemn the effort to take away the power of rational decision, to drain people of their free will--and a hell of a lot of money in the bargain. Religions vary in their degree of idiocy, but I reject them all. For most people, religion is nothing more than a substitute for a malfunctioning brain."
^This.Picard saying that he didn't want the Mintakans to revert to more primitive ways they themselves had grown out of is NOT a condemnation of all religion.
Considering what a large part of the world's population considers itself religious... if such a huge percentage of the human race has a malfunctioning brain, according to GR, there's no freaking way that this human race could ever evolve on its own in just 400 years into such a perfect, intelligent, rational population that they're supposed to be in the 24th century Trek world, according to GR. It's biologically impossible without extensive, mass-scale genetic engineering.I'm with Gene on this one
"I condemn false prophets, I condemn the effort to take away the power of rational decision, to drain people of their free will--and a hell of a lot of money in the bargain. Religions vary in their degree of idiocy, but I reject them all. For most people, religion is nothing more than a substitute for a malfunctioning brain."
Which means that GR's philosophy as presented here can't be logically sustained.![]()
Indeed. I'm not saying religious speech should be banned, just that those who don't want to hear it don't have to. I would love to be able to put a sign on my door saying "no religious proselytizing" to then be able to open the door to the next Jehovah's witness or LDS who knocks on my door with my cellphone in my hand saying "I'm calling the cops on you if you don't quit knocking on my door," and that they'd get arrested and convicted for disturbing the peace, even if they did nothing more than knock on the door and said they represented such and such a church. That's not to say that they wouldn't be allowed to build temples for interested parties to visit, but that active recruitment would be frowned on.
I'm on all no-call lists I can think of, my cellphone number's ex-directory, there's a notice on my mailbox "no unsolicited advertising", so why shouldn't I be able to stop the religious folks from invading my privacy by knocking on my door. Usually I don't answer the door if someone knocks without calling first, but that's not the point.
Is it me or is the idea of Religion in Star Trek kind of doushy and a bit stuck up. Like just because we make contact with aliens we completely discard all forms of worship. I mean, in the TNG episode," Who Watches the Watchers" Picard and the rest of the Enterprise try to prevent an underdeveloped society from entering back to a religious civilization. I mean, I know that Roddenberry was an atheist, but he didn't have to treat the idea of Religion that badly.
I mean hear is an example of how a sci-fi show treats religion and adds in scientific twist to it. In Babylon 5, many of the alien races, including Humans, still believe in their respected religious beliefs. Then it is revealed that all the holy figures in their religions are actually the Vorlons. Does that make them stop believing. NO. It only increases their faith.
So what do you think.
I was talking about Who Watches the Watchers, not about Star Trek in general.
Star Trek in general was certainly not against religion - actually, it included a bunch of very different attitudes and treatments of religion, and not just alien ones. (Does everyone forget about the ending of Bread and Circuses, which is practically an ode to how beneficial religion, or more specifically Christianity, can have a positive role in a society?) The title and premise of this thread are wrong. There's a lot more I've been meaning to write about that, but it's very late, so I'll leave that for later...
Well, it didn't exactly happen that way. What happened was that the Roman Empire persecuted Christians for the first 3 centuries, until Emperor Constantine issued the Edict of Milan and proclaimed religious toleration, making Christianity legal; several decades later, Theodosius made it the official state religion, and it remained so in the Western Roman Empire until its fall, and in the Eastern Roman Empire aka Byzantium for another thousand years, until its own fall under the Ottomans. Christianity went from the great internal threat to the cornerstone of the state, and, later, of a religious organization that was even more powerful than kings and emperors during the early Middle Ages. From an extremely subversive and, one may say, revolutionary religious movement that early Christianity was (aimed against the rich, the Roman authorities and the Jewish religious establishment, and in favor of the poor and the outcasts) it turned into a dominant, official religion and the source of power and authority - and increasingly, of intolerance and persecution. The same process can be observed with pretty much every subversive movement, whether religious or ideological, after it gains wide acceptance (say, communism - the parallels can be astounding).anyone can believe what they wish to believe, but the point where I personally draw the line is when people try to force their beliefs on others. And this goes for religious and non-religious folks alike.
And saying the romans didn't persecute people who didn't in their gods? Go read your history books. They did plenty of that and most often it was people who didn't believe the Emperor was a god. Like most old world rulers, the romans believed the Emperor was a man and a god of men. Many of the other cultures they had conquered didn't want to believe that.
Now comes Christianity, which at that time period was considered by the majority to be a cult (No offense towards anyone, but I've always viewed this bit of info a bit ironic considering how society kind of looks down on "cults" today) saying that No, he's not a god. he's just a man. There's only one god, and all your's suck. Paraphrased of course, but you get the idea.
Of course, then the roman empire falls many years later, christianity becomes a more dominate religion, and then they do the same thing in saying you have to believe us, or suffer the consequences. Now we've got the holy crusades, the inquisitions, etc.
Unfortunately, your own post demonstrates just as much ignorance and intolerance as you ascribe to Christianity and exemplifies the sort of attitude that, if one is not careful, can lead to the exact same sorts of atrocities in the name of atheism. Note that this does NOT mean I believe you personally would run a gulag. It means that those who do could potentially use the same line of reasoning.
Trying to shove in shoes and words that I paint theists with the same brush. Well, I suppose I do, if claiming each healthy member of the human race has two arms, two legs, a torso and head. The truth his the truths. Theists believe in (a) god(s), it's rather the whole point.Yet you wouldn't be pleased if I painted all atheists with the same brush, would you?
Except for that annoying fact that according to the religion, its leaders and the holy books purporting all that is good tells you those things are exactly what you need to do to be a good, Christian, Muslim or Jew.Those who committed atrocities of that sort "in the name of God" are, as I have stated earlier in this thread, the worst sort of blasphemers in word and action. People will use ANY excuse they can get hold of to excuse their own selfish actions--and unfortunately, some people choose religion because they believe it protects their actions from scrutiny. But just because they used it as their excuse does not mean that the faith is inherently evil--only that it has had some really frakked-up followers. I make zero excuses for Christians who think they can be unkind, intolerant, or cruel "in God's name." They have no right to do it. But you, conversely, have no justification for engaging in broadbrushing and discrimination in the opposite direction.
The difference is that:Just as there have been some really frakked-up atheists--and I can name any number of regimes operating under atheistic philosophies that committed horrible atrocities.
Sorry, no.Your picture of the Roman Empire is also far more idyllic than reality. You are speaking of a state where those who followed a different religion still did not have the same rights as others--no free speech, no freedom on where to spend their money, and harsh penalties if they disobeyed. They were second-class citizens. But if they refused to pay for a religion they did not support, they were indeed persecuted. How would you feel if an atheist was forced to contribute to a religious organization and then killed for non-compliance? When this has happened in history, you rightly object and condemn those who carried out those acts. Yet you present Christians' being in the same situation as this paradisical situation because you happen not to agree with Christianity. That is hypocritical, I'm afraid.
Now we've got the holy crusades
the afore mentioned crusades
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