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Students to be taught there isn't a God (Read 4126 times)
Amadd
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Students to be taught there isn't a God
Dec 14th, 2008 at 8:09pm
 
Victorian state primary school students will soon be able to take religious education classes which teach there is no evidence God exists.

The Humanist Society of Victoria has developed a curriculum for primary pupils that the state government accreditation body says it intends to approve, The Sunday Age newspaper reported.

Accredited volunteers will be able to teach their philosophy in the class time allotted for religious instruction, the newspaper said.
.....

http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=696722

That will make for some interesting schoolyard debates  Shocked


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muso
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Re: Students to be taught there isn't a God
Reply #1 - Dec 14th, 2008 at 8:54pm
 
Amadd wrote on Dec 14th, 2008 at 8:09pm:
Victorian state primary school students will soon be able to take religious education classes which teach there is no evidence God exists.

The Humanist Society of Victoria has developed a curriculum for primary pupils that the state government accreditation body says it intends to approve, The Sunday Age newspaper reported.

Accredited volunteers will be able to teach their philosophy in the class time allotted for religious instruction, the newspaper said.
.....

http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=696722

That will make for some interesting schoolyard debates  Shocked



They have been teaching Humanism in Catholic Schools for years, at least in Queensland, along with a background on other religions and world views. That's as it should be.  

I still think it's important for society that kids be taught about the main religions in Australia and what people believe from the perspective of improving cohesion in society. Humanism is basically a system of ethics combined with an atheist position. There is nothing wrong with it as long as kids are allowed to think for themselves. I'd hate to see an examination where a question like "Do Supernatural entities exist?" and the student is marked down for writing yes (or even no).  

Personally I think it would be a sad day if religion ever died out, because cultures and religions are so intertwined. Fortunately I can't see that happening any time soon.

Monocultures are rarely beneficial. It takes all sorts to make a world.  That may sound strange coming from an "atheist".
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Amadd
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Re: Students to be taught there isn't a God
Reply #2 - Dec 14th, 2008 at 9:03pm
 
Quote:
Monocultures are rarely beneficial. It takes all sorts to make a world.  That may sound strange coming from an "atheist".


Not really, I wouldn't like to see religions die out either, that would mean one less topic to argue about.
But I'd like to see Islam toned down quite a bit. It would be a sad day if this forceful religion dominates the world.

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freediver
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Re: Students to be taught there isn't a God
Reply #3 - Dec 14th, 2008 at 9:39pm
 
When I was in Germany they had religious studies. The class divided into Catholics and Protestants. There was a third option called "woerte and norm" which I think translates as morals or something like that. They didn't teach anything spiritual, but focussed on morals and social standards. It seemed a bit silly to me. I think we spent most of the time looking at cartoons. I think it must have stopped before I was fluent enough in the language because I can;t remember much about it.

This Victorian idea is an example of atheism as a religion. It's a very strange philosophy to try to teach children. If you are going to take them out of religious education calsses, at least teach them something useful. Logic would be a good start. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
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tallowood
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Re: Students to be taught there isn't a God
Reply #4 - Dec 14th, 2008 at 9:56pm
 
One more prove that atheism is just another religion. Smiley
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muso
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Re: Students to be taught there isn't a God
Reply #5 - Dec 15th, 2008 at 6:45am
 
freediver wrote on Dec 14th, 2008 at 9:39pm:
This Victorian idea is an example of atheism as a religion. It's a very strange philosophy to try to teach children.


It's an example of humanism as a religion. A class devoted to a simple instruction in "Atheism" would last approximately 5 seconds.
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locutius
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Re: Students to be taught there isn't a God
Reply #6 - Dec 15th, 2008 at 8:29am
 
Have Religion as an element of a subject of LOGIC & CRITICAL REASONING. As part of L&CR, all of the best arguments for the proof of God and the rejection of the existance of God could be examined and be shown that both camps arguments start with either a leap of faith or an assumption. That neither argument proves anything at all except how some of these arguments work on the uneducated or blinkered thinker, that ultimately it is all an act of faith that must be a personal choice and that the school system is no place for the delivering of religious instruction.

I am not quite as generous as muso when it comes to the world losing religions. I am all for the recording of these beliefs as a matter of anthropological interest etc but see no real value to the world that cannot be handle by universial humanism based on a few core tenents that still allows cultural flavouring. I think those energies would be better channelled into the real world. Get god out of the equation.
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freediver
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Re: Students to be taught there isn't a God
Reply #7 - Dec 15th, 2008 at 12:30pm
 
Quote:
It's an example of humanism as a religion. A class devoted to a simple instruction in "Atheism" would last approximately 5 seconds.


Do you have to teach that God doesn't exist to teach humanism? I thought it was about more 'immediate' issues. Humanism as I know it would be a more sensible option. Teaching that God doesn't exist is atheist indoctrination. It is a strange philosophy to teach. It has no inherent value, except to undermine potentially competing philosophies.

Quote:
Have Religion as an element of a subject of LOGIC & CRITICAL REASONING. As part of L&CR, all of the best arguments for the proof of God and the rejection of the existance of God could be examined and be shown that both camps arguments start with either a leap of faith or an assumption.


Exactly. There is no logic. The closest you would get is arguing over historical facts. It is about faith. This is what makes the atheist indoctrination so strange, as there is no source for the faith. It is a rejection of other people's faith with one that is fairly arbitrarily invented.
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muso
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Re: Students to be taught there isn't a God
Reply #8 - Dec 15th, 2008 at 2:47pm
 
freediver wrote on Dec 15th, 2008 at 12:30pm:
Quote:
It's an example of humanism as a religion. A class devoted to a simple instruction in "Atheism" would last approximately 5 seconds.


Do you have to teach that God doesn't exist to teach humanism? I thought it was about more 'immediate' issues. Humanism as I know it would be a more sensible option. Teaching that God doesn't exist is atheist indoctrination. It is a strange philosophy to teach. It has no inherent value, except to undermine potentially competing philosophies.


I agree almost entirely. It's just as strange as teaching that God does exist in isolation. My point was that this is not an example of  teaching 'atheism' as a 'religion'. It's teaching humanism.
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NorthOfNorth
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Re: Students to be taught there isn't a God
Reply #9 - Dec 15th, 2008 at 3:05pm
 
muso wrote on Dec 15th, 2008 at 6:45am:
freediver wrote on Dec 14th, 2008 at 9:39pm:
This Victorian idea is an example of atheism as a religion. It's a very strange philosophy to try to teach children.


It's an example of humanism as a religion. A class devoted to a simple instruction in "Atheism" would last approximately 5 seconds.

And I doubt they'll waste any more time than that on the question of god's existence.

From the original article.
Quote:
"Atheistical parents will be pleased to hear that humanistic courses of ethics will soon be available in some state schools," Victorian Humanist Society president Stephen Stuart said.

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Jim Profit
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Re: Students to be taught there isn't a God
Reply #10 - Dec 17th, 2008 at 8:31am
 
It's not the schools job to prove or disprove God. Nor is it really their place to be "educating" children on things like religion. I know Australia doesn't have a constitution, but here we have seperation of church and state. (Even though nobody pays attention to it or has a clue to what it means..)

What it really means basically is that church and state are protected by the law. That the state cannnot intrude on religious practices that are not blatantly disruptive, and the state is not to be overtaken by any particular religion. Banning the production of pork based on Muslim law would be violating seperation of church and state, barring Muslims from praying in their backyard would be violating seperation of church and state.


School should equip our children to find jobs. Learn a trade, focus more on linquistics and whatever study they're interested in.. It would save the taxpayer money, give our kids some valuable information, and nobody would get pissed off because we could still teach our kids our values at home..
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NorthOfNorth
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Re: Students to be taught there isn't a God
Reply #11 - Dec 17th, 2008 at 8:43am
 
Jim Profit wrote on Dec 17th, 2008 at 8:31am:
It's not the schools job to prove or disprove God. Nor is it really their place to be "educating" children on things like religion.
I know Australia doesn't have a constitution
, but here we have seperation of church and state. (Even though nobody pays attention to it or has a clue to what it means..)

What it really means basically is that church and state are protected by the law. That the state cannnot intrude on religious practices that are not blatantly disruptive, and the state is not to be overtaken by any particular religion. Banning the production of pork based on Muslim law would be violating seperation of church and state, barring Muslims from praying in their backyard would be violating seperation of church and state.


School should equip our children to find jobs. Learn a trade, focus more on linquistics and whatever study they're interested in.. It would save the taxpayer money, give our kids some valuable information, and nobody would get pissed off because we could still teach our kids our values at home..

Might pay to read a bit about Australia.
Australian Constitution
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« Last Edit: Dec 17th, 2008 at 8:48am by NorthOfNorth »  

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muso
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Re: Students to be taught there isn't a God
Reply #12 - Dec 17th, 2008 at 8:58am
 
I think he meant Bill of Rights.

Actually I prefer the approach that the US public education system has taken. They don't teach religion in public schools (there may be some exceptions), although some of them have that broad teaching of different religions that I alluded to earlier.
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tallowood
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Re: Students to be taught there isn't a God
Reply #13 - Dec 17th, 2008 at 9:28am
 
Amadd wrote on Dec 14th, 2008 at 9:03pm:
Quote:
Monocultures are rarely beneficial. It takes all sorts to make a world.  That may sound strange coming from an "atheist".

Not really, I wouldn't like to see religions die out either, that would mean one less topic to argue about.
But I'd like to see Islam toned down quite a bit. It would be a sad day if this forceful religion dominates the world.


I don't think religions die out. It is just that people becoming more relaxed about their believes, most of them anyway. Exeptions are Islam, Atheism and may be Buddhism(?).

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Re: Students to be taught there isn't a God
Reply #14 - Dec 17th, 2008 at 9:41am
 
Leaps of faith? Well we certainly witness that, and I can accept that,but what annoys me is leaps of logic.

FD wrote that the victorian example was a case of humanism as a religion, it, of course, is not.

They clearly state that they will be teaching that there is "NO EVIDENCE" of there being a god, which will at least allow them to start their enquiry into the subject from an honest position, unlike "ALL" religions, which claim to "KNOW", definitively of the existence of god.
Not just any god either, they definitively know of their particular flavour god.

So, once more we see religions trying to have their faith based beliefs, taught exclusively as facts, and the idea that kids be treated with enough respect, as to give them an honest and well rounded education about the religious choices they could make, scares the crap out of them.

As Jim pointed out, we unfortunately have no enshrined legislation to separate church and state in australia, which is unfortunate, because religion has no place in education, it should always remain a private matter, and definitely should not be imposed on kids, it should always be a free choice for adults to make.
Seeing another, honest perspective, should help kids to make up their own minds, when they are ready.
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OOPS!!! My Karma, ran over your Dogma!
 
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