Sophronius
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2010
- Messages
- 463
You said:
An argument from authority, as in the logical falacy, is a falacy because the person you make it to does not accept the authority.
That's not why argument from authority is a fallacy.
No, I said:
An argument from authority, as in the logical falacy, is a falacy because the person you make it to does not accept the authority. Saying that person X has an authority in a certain field is not an argument from authority if that person is indeed an authority in the field. (As long as you do not proceed to claim that this makes whatever that person says automatically true)
It is perfectly valid to point out a difference in experience between people.
Just because something is between brackets does not mean you should ignore it.
And yes, I was under the impression that if someone cites an authority that you do not recognize to prove a point (for example, a christian quoting the bible as evidence to an atheist) this counts as argument from authority. This is part of the definition I learned and memorised from back in High School, but it's possible that my teacher and literature were simply wrong.
See, but it is not a "fact", it is two different opinions.
I was using the expression "it doesn't change the facts", as in: it doesn't change the reality of the matter. I was simply saying that it doesn't matter that those fundamentalists believe that what they are doing isn't indoctrination. I wasn't referring to any specific facts.
There is no objective evidence- at least, Complexity doesn't have any- that the "indoctrination" he speaks of meets any of the criteria for the more pejoritive interpretation. Contrariwise, the demonstrable fact that there are people that have recived this kind of education but are not bound to "a specific partisan or biased belief or point of view" indicates that this is not the correct view of the process in all cases.
Not in all cases, no. But there are certainly people who teach their children that the Bible is the inerrant word of god. I think it is quite reasonable to say that teaching children to accept the contents of the Bible uncritically constitutes indoctrination and can be seen as child abuse.
I don't think it is reasonable to ask for hard evidence to back up a judgement call in this matter.
Try this, rewrite your sentence, "Telling children that they have to love jesus and believe everything in the bible or they will go to hell is indoctrination" without using the word "indoctrination", and see what you come up with.
Uhm, alright, I'll give it a shot.
"Telling children that they have to love jesus and believe everything in the bible or they will go to hell teaches them to accept doctrines uncritically."
I don't really get what game you are trying to play here.
Simple observable facts indicate that the most accurate version is "Telling children that they have to love jesus and believe everything in the bible or they will go to hell is religious education." To believe something more sinister than that is to postulate that religious parents do not want what is best for their children, are willingly and deliberately harming their own children for some enslaving purpose that trumps their own love, care and concern for their progeny- pretty much the same lies told about the Soviet Union back in the day, in fact. I'm fairly certain that is what Complexity believes. Is that what you are saying?
No, of course not. I don't feel nearly as strongly about this as Complexity, and I certainly don't think that the parents are intentionally harming their children. I have said this several times in this thread, actually.