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Ban religious schools? (Read 44433 times)
freediver
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #150 - Jun 18th, 2008 at 12:13pm
 
It is their parent's right to teach them that if they want to.
No, that is not good enough, we should also make sure that when they are at school they are told the same thing.


No, 'we' should not be making sure of it. We should be letting parents choose. If a parent has a right to teach their child something, then that right extends to sending them to a school where it is taught. There is no difference. Otherwise you are arbitrarily limiting their rights, by saying they can say it to their children but they can't let someone else say the same thing on their behalf. You do not get to decide how other parents teach their children religion. They are free to do it themselves, or whatever way they want.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #151 - Jun 18th, 2008 at 12:22pm
 
I understand your point FD, but I believe we sometimes need to limit some rights for the good of society.
Education, and the raising of children is an area I take tremendously seriously, and I believe that all kids deserve the right to recieve an unbiased and balanced education.

In earlier times religious schools were less extreme, but now we are seeing a shift toward very fundamentalist beliefs being taught, this completely insulates those subjected to it from experiencing societal norms, and creates growing insularity, of an Us against Them nature.

Ultimately this could lead to severe social disharmony and conflict.

I think people have plenty of time outside of school hours to teach their kids values specific to their religious beliefs, but they also need to learn societies values, and secularising education would certainly help with that.

Limiting some freedoms for the greater good is a fair trade.
No one at school would be telling them their parents are wrong, their religion is wrong, they would just be receiving a normal balanced education, with any religious bias removed, how can that be bad?
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #152 - Jun 18th, 2008 at 12:52pm
 
Quote:
In earlier times religious schools were less extreme, but now we are seeing a shift toward very fundamentalist beliefs being taught, this completely insulates those subjected to it from experiencing societal norms, and creates growing insularity, of an Us against Them nature.

Ultimately this could lead to severe social disharmony and conflict.


True and this is where any pacifist government will make changes.  Rudd is now going down the list of indulgances - Howard's legacies - and making changes.  Now that figures are coming out for the inconsistencies in public and private/religious education ie government funding per child - he will balance this out a bit more hopefully.
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freediver
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #153 - Jun 18th, 2008 at 12:53pm
 
I believe that all kids deserve the right to recieve an unbiased and balanced education.

There is no such thing as an unbiased and balanced education. All education is a form of indoctrination. Freedom of religion is far more important than a right to what you see as an unbiased education.

In earlier times religious schools were less extreme, but now we are seeing a shift toward very fundamentalist beliefs being taught

No we aren't. We are seeing the opposite. What we are seeing is an increase in is scaremongering.

Ultimately this could lead to severe social disharmony and conflict.

Imposing conformity is not the solution to disharmony. Tolerance is. Taking away people's right to be different is the opposite of tolerance. It will not stop with imposing uniform education. Once you validate intolerance, people become more intolerant, not less. They start fretting over all the other little differences and demanding the government intervene and remove them also. Your solution would not lead to social harmony. It would lead to the opposite. People will not be harmonious when you try to take their children away from them because they practice their fundamental right to freedom of religion. They will try to kill you.

but they also need to learn societies values

Our society values freedom above all else. You do not teach that value by taking freedom away. You need to be re-educated in our society's values.  Wink

Limiting some freedoms for the greater good is a fair trade.

No it isn't. It is the reason why human rights are considered fundamental and inalienable, because there is always someone trying to take them away 'for the greater good'. It is a BS excuse to impose your views on others.

No one at school would be telling them their parents are wrong

You cannot impose secular views regarding religion without telling them that theirs is not the one true religion. You must treat them all equally.
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mozzaok
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #154 - Jun 18th, 2008 at 1:29pm
 
Now you are back at square one FD, just being a goose for the sake of it.

"There is no such thing as an unbiased and balanced education. All education is a form of indoctrination. Freedom of religion is far more important than a right to what you see as an unbiased education."FD

Well thought out and well supported argument ?

"In earlier times religious schools were less extreme, but now we are seeing a shift toward very fundamentalist beliefs being taught"mozza

"No we aren't. We are seeing the opposite. What we are seeing is an increase in is scaremongering."FD

Well now you are being really silly, the shift has been to a proliferation of what would be considered more extreme, fundamentalist, or fringe schools proliferating since Howard changed the funding arrangements, as I posted earlier.
I did not make up the figure of a new faith school opening every six weeks in the early 2000's.

So you think tolerance will make evryone stop insularising themselves?
How does further insularisation not harm social cohesion and harmony?
We are a country built on egalitarianism, and that is unlikely to continue if people withdraw from society and create their own insular groups within it.

Anyway, I am sick of this, you really are being a total bluey on this subject, try coming down off your high horse for a minute and take a look at the real world.
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freediver
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #155 - Jun 18th, 2008 at 1:53pm
 
Well thought out and well supported argument ?

Well I did give some examples earler. Science for example teaches demonstrably wrong theories as fact, merely because they are 'dominant' in the broader community.

Well now you are being really silly, the shift has been to a proliferation of what would be considered more extreme, fundamentalist, or fringe schools proliferating since Howard changed the funding arrangements, as I posted earlier.

That is hardly a trend. Now Rudd may reduce private school funding. No need to ban them.

I did not make up the figure of a new faith school opening every six weeks in the early 2000's.

Where did you get it from?

We are a country built on egalitarianism

How is it egalitarian to say your approach to child raising is better than everyone else's, so the government must take people's children away so they can be indoctrinated into your school of thought? That is the opposite of egalitarian. It is a superiority complex run wild. You look down on religious people. You make no attempt to hide your contempt for them. You think they can't be trusted to make choices for their own children. It is one of the most unaustralian concepts I have come across.

So you think tolerance will make evryone stop insularising themselves?

Sure. That has been the trend for a few centuries now. No reason why it should suddenly stop. You seem to be living in a historical vacuum, where nothing existed prior to 1990. And besides, freedom is more important than the 'societal issue' you project onto insularity.

Anyway, I am sick of this, you really are being a total bluey on this subject, try coming down off your high horse for a minute and take a look at the real world.

I am looking at the real world. You aren't. What starts as limited dismantling of human rights ends with gas chambers. We have seen the consequences of what you propose many times and we have rejected it. On the other hand the problems you complain about are not problems at all. It is pure scare mongering that has never caused anything like the problems that come with the erosion of human rights.

Putting 'society' before human rights and personal freedom is just stupid. It always ends badly. Societies are made up of individuals. It is not society you are putting first, but yourself, by pretending that 'my way or the highway' is some kind of improvement to freedom of choice. It is arrogant to think that imposing your choices on others will somehow improve things, merely by reducing people's freedom to be different.

Personal freedom has got us to where we are today, and only a moron would think going back to the dark ages is an improvement.
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« Last Edit: Jun 18th, 2008 at 2:08pm by freediver »  

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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #156 - Jun 18th, 2008 at 3:02pm
 
freediver wrote on Jun 18th, 2008 at 1:53pm:
It is one of the most unaustralian concepts I have come across.



Again, that word! What makes it unquely Australian that to defy it, is positively un-Australian?

Wink

freediver wrote on Jun 18th, 2008 at 1:53pm:
Science for example teaches demonstrably wrong theories as fact, merely because they are 'dominant' in the broader community.



Not true. It cannot be disproven by science and therefore it is a theory. It is never taught as fact. I've never heard a lecturer say that "it is a fact that when you enter a black hole you will be transported to and exit via a white hole to another part of the universe." They will always say "Einstein's theory states that...." or "Newton's Inverse Square theory says....." You, yourself said that scientists always avoid using the term "fact".

Take the theory of the speed of light.

The speed of light in vacuum is now viewed as a fundamental physical constant. This postulate, together with the principle of relativity that all inertial frames are equivalent, forms the basis of Einstein's theory of special relativity. According to the currently prevailing definition, adopted in 1983, the speed of light is exactly 299,792,458 metres per second (approximately 3×108 metres per second, or about 30 centimetres (1 foot) per nanosecond).

They use terms and phrases such as "viewed as", "postulate", "principles", "basis" and "prevailing definition".
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #157 - Jun 18th, 2008 at 3:19pm
 
Not true. It cannot be disproven by science and therefore it is a theory.

That's the opposite of what science is. Science is limited to the falisifiable. In this case what they are teaching has been falsified, or disproven.

It is never taught as fact. I've never heard a lecturer say that "it is a fact that when you enter a black hole you will be transported to and exit via a white hole to another part of the universe."

Nop, but you probably have been taught that F=ma.

You, yourself said that scientists always avoid using the term "fact".

I'm not talking about scientists. I'm talking about high school science teachers. Also, in maths II, though I think they call it something else these days. When your history teacher talks about the holocaust, it is presented as fact, even though they don't use the term fact. In science, students are indoctrinated into seeing the world a certain way, even though that 'way' is wrong. If they do physics through to grade 12, they are eventually mislead into thinking the correct way is the same view of the world with slightly different equations.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #158 - Jun 18th, 2008 at 3:58pm
 
freediver wrote on Jun 18th, 2008 at 3:19pm:
Nop, but you probably have been taught that F=ma.

....

I'm not talking about scientists. I'm talking about high school science teachers. Also, in maths II, though I think they call it something else these days. When your history teacher talks about the holocaust, it is presented as fact, even though they don't use the term fact. In science, students are indoctrinated into seeing the world a certain way, even though that 'way' is wrong. If they do physics through to grade 12, they are eventually mislead into thinking the correct way is the same view of the world with slightly different equations.


Yes, I was taught that F=ma. I've also been taught that a˛+b˛=c˛, and also that 2+2=4. Those are formulas and tools for calculating to achive a conceptual result. Yes, maths and geometry are concepts.

Newton's 2nd Law is a theory and not taught as fact. However, if you want to calculate force using Newton's theory then the formula is F=....

Re: holocaust. You are comparing history with science. History studies factual past event. There's no need to use the term fact because the name of the subject already implies that. Science is not a factual subject. It is a conceptual subject. When studying science one needs to differentiate hypothesis, theory, law, and observation.

I cannot speak for the good or bad high school science teachers out there. However, once they get to university level (where the serious learning begins) whatever misconceptions they were introduced to at high school would be unlearnt.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #159 - Jun 18th, 2008 at 4:01pm
 
Re: holocaust. You are comparing history with science.

I was just pointing out that you don't have to call something a fact to present it as a fact. Even if they were told it is a theory, or law, that is still a form of indoctrination, because they are being taught to see the world in a way that is wrong.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #160 - Jun 18th, 2008 at 4:32pm
 
freediver wrote on Jun 18th, 2008 at 4:01pm:
....because they are being taught to see the world in a way that is wrong.


....because they are being taught to see the a concept of the world that could possibly be wrong.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #161 - Jun 18th, 2008 at 4:54pm
 
There's nothing 'possible' about it. Newtonian mechanics has been disproven. All science is 'probably wrong', but we teach it because it is the best explanation available and the best one that hasn't been disproven. That is not the case with NM.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #162 - Jun 18th, 2008 at 5:12pm
 
freediver wrote on Jun 18th, 2008 at 4:54pm:
There's nothing 'possible' about it. Newtonian mechanics has been disproven. All science is 'probably wrong', but we teach it because it is the best explanation available and the best one that hasn't been disproven. That is not the case with NM.


Ok, I concede - I should have said "probably".

Smiley
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #163 - Jun 18th, 2008 at 8:55pm
 
Newtonian mechanics is definitely wrong.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #164 - Jun 18th, 2008 at 10:46pm
 
freediver wrote on Jun 18th, 2008 at 8:55pm:
Newtonian mechanics is definitely wrong.


J H Christ, FD! You are getting on my nerves!
Wink

You just like that race of people I mentioned in another thread who just can't seem to discuss the topic in context.

My post had nothing to do with NM. Let me spell it out to you in full....

....because they are being taught to see the a concept of the world that could probably be wrong.

Happy?

Cheesy
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