Study to crack evangelical stereotypes
6/4/2008 2:36:19 AM
1 and 2 surprise me since in the past you said you'd join the war to fight for israel....sorry thats not on topic i wont post anymore, but i know you've posted that]
6/4/2008 2:39:23 AM
^ Um. . .do you have anything to offer on the topic or would you just like to make this about me--as usual?
6/4/2008 2:46:57 AM
6/4/2008 3:06:32 AM
^ Sweet Jesus (pun intended), is that all you can muster?
6/4/2008 3:14:45 AM
OK, on one level I think the sort of position advocated in the OP article needs to be put forward more often by respectable members of the "intelligentsia."On the other hand, he's acting like kind of a douche about it. This is unfortunately inevitable.Most of us acknowledge, at least on an abstract plane, that in any group you will find rational enough people who can be reasoned with. I think that plenty of people tend to forget about this when talking about evangelical Christians (even Christians in general) than is really fair. That said, I remain sadly confident that anyone who points such a thing out in academic circles is doomed to be torn to pieces -- all to often with good reason, since they're not typically very competent at it.Berger's carefree use of terms like "elite" immediately damage him, if he's even sincere to begin with. His insistence that stereotypes about evangelicals have become remarkably less true in recent years do nothing to help.
6/4/2008 3:30:36 AM
^ Maureen Dowd is one example given that fits the "elite" description perfectly--trust me:And do you honestly believe this statement by her?
6/4/2008 3:42:38 AM
No. That's a factual statement referring to Bush's first and, at the time, only veto over stem cell research. Maureen Dowd's a feminist pariah I despise, but that wasn't elitist.[Edited on June 4, 2008 at 3:55 AM. Reason : ...]
6/4/2008 3:52:52 AM
I never said it wasn't elitist.I will claim, however, that to some extent "elitism" is not a bad thing.The basic component of the American dream is to either become the "elite" or to propel your children to that status.There are, of course, certain types of elitist. There's the one who thinks only the most educated and refined should have a say in how things are run. These people are assholes.There's also that type that realizes that smart, potentially well-educated people have a higher possibility of knowing what the hell they are doing. Those people have sense. The whole reason we have elections is because we collectively realize that the average schmuck doesn't need to be deciding what goes on in this country and the rest of the world.As for Dowd, I don't know. Certainly there are plenty of evangelicals of the fundamentalist stripe, and these do have a "fear of scientific progress." Based on plenty of the numbers these people quite possibly won the election for Bush. Now, whether she thinks that evangelical Christians are a pack of retards or that a pack of retarded evangelicals swayed the election, it's hard to say from that quote. She may well be elitist. She's also one broad with a typewriter. You should stop shitting yourself over her.
6/4/2008 3:56:35 AM
^^ Disagreeing about stem cell research, which I disagree with Bush about (though he's had a bit of vindication recently), is quite a different thing than the direct quotation listed above. Can you not see that?It's one thing to specifically say that evangelicals disagree with stem cell research. It's quite another thing--an elitist thing--to generally say that evangelicals have a "fear of scientific progress." I mean, that makes them sound about one level evolved from troglodytes.^ Um. . ."smart" and "well-educated" are two different things. There are plenty of well-educated people that aren't smart and plenty of smart people that didn't receive a lot of formal education. And please STFU with the "shitting [myself]" stupidity--I've done nothing of the sort. I simply used one example from the article. [Edited on June 4, 2008 at 4:10 AM. Reason : .]
6/4/2008 4:01:36 AM
6/4/2008 4:14:41 AM
^ Yeah, I don't know how Bill Gates, Michael Dell, Steve Jobs, Larry Ellison, and Richard Branson--just to name a few--managed to make their billions without degrees. Let's not get bogged down with this--you get my point. And I'm going to bed now.
6/4/2008 4:20:33 AM
6/4/2008 4:29:39 AM
^ Not at all--it's more like agnostic. But that doesn't quite fit me either.PS: Could you try to address the topic and not focus on me? Thanks. [Edited on June 4, 2008 at 4:32 AM. Reason : .]
6/4/2008 4:31:43 AM
6/4/2008 4:37:53 AM
6/4/2008 4:40:09 AM
Why even respond to that?http://www.inteldaily.com/?c=120&a=1800(IOW - No Correlation Between Wealth and Intelligence)[Edited on June 4, 2008 at 5:13 AM. Reason : ...]
6/4/2008 5:10:50 AM
Since when did the elitism brand become such a powerful argument?Sure, elitism is impolite, but it doesn't invalidate arguments in the way Republicans are trying to use it.And for that matter, why do uneducated people all of a sudden have a right to be right? educated person to uneducated person: "You're wrong" = elitism, argument dismisseduneducated person to educated person: "You're wrong" = OK!!1
6/4/2008 7:52:48 AM
don't get me wrong[no racism].but hell yes i'd fight for the Israeli Defense Force:[Edited on June 4, 2008 at 8:01 AM. Reason : ]
6/4/2008 8:01:10 AM
http://scienceblogs.com/gnxp/2008/05/biblical_literalism_or_low_iq.phphttp://scienceblogs.com/gnxp/2008/05/educational_levels_denominatio.php
6/4/2008 8:17:44 AM
wow. categorizing by religion. lol.it's case by case, human by human you dumb ass. or else i'm not understanding those worthless graphs.
6/4/2008 8:35:06 AM
it's not categorizing by religion, it's categorizing by denomination. Denominations are most closely correlated with evangelicalism and bible literalism. Obviously you can't tell an individual's personal beliefs or intelligence by simply dropping them into a category, but if you can't see how large sets of data over large populations will smooth out the outliers and get to a generally representative average, then there's not much I can do for you.
6/4/2008 9:14:07 AM
Someone needs to call the Waaaahmbulance.
6/4/2008 9:15:02 AM
come on, guys. play nice.
6/4/2008 9:17:39 AM
I wonder how they quantified "Biblical Literalism"... I mean, Jehovah's Witness have their own translation of the Bible. Episcopals use a special book called the Common Book of Prayer. Roman Catholics use books from the Apocrypha. Southern Baptists, ironically, don't believe in salvation from baptism. So, the results aren't even based on a common demoninator. Too trivial of a study if you ask me.
6/4/2008 10:26:33 AM
some of the data points may be off, and maybe some of the methodology isn't perfect. But you have to be completely delusional to not agree that the strong belief in unsubstantiated books of myths, be it the Bible, the Book or Morman, Apocrypha, or Dianetics, does not correlate to overall intelligence. Obviously there are are exceptions to all rules. There are plenty of very smart and intellectual evangelicals, and likewise there are a lot of idiotic Atheists, deists or non-fundamentalist/evangelical christians, but statistics are based on populations, not individuals.
6/4/2008 10:49:22 AM
6/4/2008 10:51:23 AM
if it measures the non-belief in myths, the supernatural, the paranormal, then that's good enough for me
6/4/2008 10:53:59 AM
Seems a bit circular. Because of the contradictions, I'm sure scientific eduction would reduce literal belief in religious texts. But is that intelligence? I don't see why literal belief would reduce, say, language ability.
6/4/2008 10:59:56 AM
6/4/2008 11:22:56 AM
I was disappointed not to see data on the Presbyterian Church of America (PCA). They're an extremely conservative denomination but also seems to be disproportionately represented among the small pockets of Christians in graduate and post graduate circles.
6/4/2008 12:34:15 PM
6/4/2008 12:41:49 PM
6/4/2008 1:06:15 PM
I'd hate to say this, but I don't think America is ready to have an openly Christian President.
6/4/2008 1:39:17 PM
We're not supposed to have an openly Christian president. Or an openly Catholic, or anything.
6/4/2008 1:43:21 PM
To agentlion: Thanks for proving this point from the article. GG.
6/4/2008 4:12:03 PM
Where exactly did Shah get that figure?Because that's certainly news to me.
6/4/2008 4:25:00 PM
^ Yeah, you've pinpointed the problem, Detective Horse.
6/4/2008 4:55:20 PM
The majority of evangelicals believe in evolution?really? Does that sit well with you?Didn't we just see a poll saying the majority of Americans don't believe in evolution? That would mean that evangelicals are more prone to believe in evolution than the average person
6/4/2008 4:59:21 PM
6/4/2008 5:05:18 PM
6/4/2008 5:06:28 PM
6/4/2008 5:12:02 PM
^oh, we're in dire need of a Muslim President
6/4/2008 5:13:59 PM
^ Do you really feel that being openly of a certain belief system is equal to submitting to some kind of religious authority on decisions within a political office?Really? Have you ever met someone who was "openly Christian" that wasn't Gary Birdsong?
6/4/2008 5:26:03 PM
6/4/2008 5:33:16 PM
Saying evangelicals fear science because they are against embryonic stem cell research is absurd. They are not against all genetic research, for example adult stem cell research is uncontroversial and in fact from what I understand promising.You know what, I'm against eating human flesh in most circumstances. I guess it must be my low-brow evangelical leanings railing against solving the problem of world hunger. Oh wait, its not that I fear that the world will have food its that I fear that it is unethical to eat human flesh.I know many very intelligent people who do not find the hypothesis of evolution at all convincing. Some of these are evangelicals, but not all.I would actually argue that the reason that those denominations are not as intelligent may be in part a question of geography. Its a symptom of local culture not religion. The more northern states tend to have the less literal denominations. No offense all ya all but the south on the average does not seem to be a hotbed of intellectualism. Chicken or egg? Was the north full of less educated people back when it more largely took a more literal view of scripture? I personally do not believe we are more intelligent than our ancestors. I think that we seem more intelligent in some respects because of the transfer of knowledge made possible through the advent of books. More recently google has enabled many a poster to assemble an erudite comment that would he would never have proffered modulo the magic of google. Anyway, getting back to the culture, would you really argue that those who are not fundamentalists are generally as smart as those folks in other more educated regions? Or maybe the south and the north are equally stupid just in different ways but the test aint fair.Anyway, there are stupid people of all ideologies. This is for sure. Arguing the statistics of who is stupidest seems well, stupid frankly.I think that part of the reason that evangelical scholars do not get enough credit is that they are more humble on the average. Self-aggrandizing behaviour is a sure way to get media and academic attention, but no serious Christian could engage in such. Secular scholars on the other hand can use shock and awe in their literature, say scandalous things etc... generally draw attention to their ideas. When Christian scholars do good work it is generally dismissed by lots of academics simply because of the starting point. The acceptance of scripture is tantamount to stupidity if you ask many academics. Never the less, there are many arguments based on scripture which are both academic and deep. As deep as any philosophy or science. Just without the presupposition that the mind of man is the end all and be all of existence.There are of course exceptions, there do exist academics which entertain the thoughts of evangelicals. I have met a few.
6/4/2008 6:26:23 PM
6/4/2008 6:29:21 PM
^fine, "theory" if it makes you happy. I prefer the term hypothesis in the context it was used. We don't find the "theory" or "law" or "idea" etc... a convincing explanation for the structure of life on earth.
6/4/2008 6:57:11 PM
mhum, because i'm sure you are all so well equipped the the background knowledge required to effectively argue against evolution
6/4/2008 9:58:29 PM
^ Are you "well equipped the the [sic] background knowledge" to effectively argue for evolution?
6/5/2008 1:08:02 AM