Why does affirmitive action prohibit discrimination on the basis of religion? Certainly race, gender and arguably sexuality are products of genetics and should not be used to profile groups of people. Religious views, on the other hand, are presumably something one comes to conclude through rigorous logic. As an employer, wouldn't religious questions be relavent in an interview? If a potential employee is basing their life decisions on anecdotal evidence or word of mouth, shouldn't I be wary of putting them in some analytical position? On the other hand, if they can provide sound argument for their beliefs, shouldn't that make them stand out? Sorry for the typos, I'm on my phone.
1/24/2010 8:50:21 PM
Believe it or not, religion is often a product of genetics
1/24/2010 9:08:41 PM
Woah, woah, woah. What? Please, explain these "Jesus Genes". . .
1/24/2010 10:11:09 PM
1/24/2010 10:12:13 PM
most people inherit religion from their parents. Its not like picking a major. Its drilled into you from the start.
1/24/2010 10:15:51 PM
1/24/2010 10:16:54 PM
^^ Haha. Okay. That, at least, makes a little more sense although thankfully we do have the ability to exercise free choice when it comes to religion even if it deviates from that of our parents.
1/24/2010 10:31:01 PM
Tell that to the Duggar children.
1/24/2010 10:32:33 PM
Fair enough. Some people chose to drink the kool-aid.
1/24/2010 10:34:22 PM
I should have said views about religion.
1/24/2010 10:35:01 PM
So while atheists may not be in fox holes they'll at least have a place at the office?
1/24/2010 10:38:33 PM
^ I'm not sure what you're getting at.
1/24/2010 10:40:27 PM
By that logic you should be able to deny employment to people based on their political beliefs, which opens up an (arguably) even more dangerous can of worms.There's also the question of what qualifies you to judge whether or not an applicants beliefs are backed up by "sound argument." Why are you magically less prone to making logical errors than anybody else?
1/24/2010 11:30:45 PM
You are allowed to give logical tests, microsoft pioneered this practice and no one would argue it isn't a good judge of competency. The prototypical question of "how long would it take to move mt. Fujii" has no specific answer, and answers like "5 seconds with a teleporter" could be given, but would receive no credit from the interviewer. Instead, they are looking for well reasoned responses, possibly estimating the volume of the mountain and comparing that with the volume of a dump truck. I hope that most would agree the logic in the second response is a bit more sound, even if we know nothing of mountains and how to move them. As far as political beliefs go, presumeably you have come to those conclusions logically, starting from some set of axioms that mirror your personal beliefs. Identifing these would be a good judge of whether or not a candidate would make a nice fit with the company. I guess what I want to get at is their ability to defend their stated positions, particularly ones as important to them as their religious views.
1/25/2010 12:12:47 AM
1/25/2010 12:41:39 AM
affirmative action and prohibition of discrimination is not the same thing. religion is a protected class, but affirmative action has nothing to do with that. affirmitive action is about creating equal opportunity in different scenarios (school, workplace, etc), but putting "Jewish" on an application form should not help nor hurt my chances of getting into a school or getting a jobunless that job is banker, broker, jeweler, lawyer, doctor, or actor[Edited on January 25, 2010 at 1:04 AM. Reason : -]
1/25/2010 1:04:19 AM
There are talented people, in every profession, that happen to be religious. People can compartmentalize their beliefs and they won't even bring rationality into the picture. It's not that they aren't capable of rational analysis, it's that they're not willing to perform it on their own religious beliefs.
1/25/2010 9:02:30 AM
what does this have to do with affirmative action?
1/25/2010 9:04:33 AM
1/25/2010 10:03:55 AM
It is possible for people to have a logical component to their faith. To state otherwise shows both ignorance and arrogance. No one knows how the universe came into existence, and believing that nothing caused it requires more faith than believing that there was a specific cause. There are many reasons to believe that a supreme being was the cause, and I believe it to be as logical as any other explanation. This is argued very convincingly in William Lane Craig's Kalam Cosmological Argument.
1/25/2010 10:13:58 AM
That said, I believe that employers in the private sector should be able to hire based on any criteria they wish. If they choose to eliminate a large portion of potential employees based on nothing other than their own stupidity, that's their choice to make.
1/25/2010 10:17:48 AM
^^ Oh shit here we go
1/25/2010 10:27:29 AM
Its entirely possible to have someone who believes every part of their religion litterally (world created in 6 days, etc...) who is capable of perfoming technical tasks. However, these people are probably really limited in their ability to think outside their programming. You give them a well defined set of rules and tell them to perform a task inside those rules and they're all good. They wont stray outside the rules, for better or worse.Then you have other religious folks who realize all the voodoo stuff is crap and mostly do religion for the morality and community aspects. This is probably most people.Then you have the zealots. You dont need to worry about them because they aren't capable of getting through any education that conflicts with their religion.The first 2 have very apparent differences outside of religious views to the point that the original question becomes moot. Discrimination based on religion is irrelevent because other their are other consistant, legitimate factors to make hiring decisions on.
1/25/2010 10:47:53 AM
1/25/2010 12:24:08 PM
1/25/2010 12:32:16 PM
1/25/2010 12:56:36 PM
1/25/2010 1:00:24 PM
disco stu let's not get into this pleeeeeeeaase
1/25/2010 1:01:40 PM
^^[Edited on January 25, 2010 at 1:01 PM. Reason : ^]
1/25/2010 1:01:42 PM
1/25/2010 1:03:46 PM
1/25/2010 1:05:25 PM
1/25/2010 1:10:40 PM
1/25/2010 1:35:57 PM
Thread title mentions religion -> Thread dissolves into religion vs non-religion.
1/25/2010 1:41:11 PM
1/25/2010 2:20:48 PM
1/25/2010 2:44:43 PM
I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that those of you who think religion is a joke have difficulty thinking 'outside the box' by your own definition. As long as you have "a well defined set of rules" (aka science), you won't stray outside the box and 'they're all good'
1/25/2010 3:24:03 PM
Actually the complete opposite is true.People who follow their parent's same religious beliefs don't really "think outside the box."
1/25/2010 3:57:22 PM
Ok, so if your off spring become religious......?So by saying God does not exist and thinking faith doesn't exist either is thinking out of the box now? lol[Edited on January 25, 2010 at 4:22 PM. Reason : .]
1/25/2010 4:20:52 PM
Shit happens.
1/25/2010 4:21:17 PM
Yeah...like they started thinking outside the box.[Edited on January 25, 2010 at 4:23 PM. Reason : side*]
1/25/2010 4:23:12 PM
No, I would think that I failed them as a parent, actually.There's no "out of the box" thinking in believing in superstition and magic.
1/25/2010 4:24:14 PM
What religion are we talking about here? Is this some kind of harry potter religion?You lack the ability to comprehend faith because you are stuck in your ways and cannot think outside the box. /thread.
1/25/2010 4:26:13 PM
1/25/2010 4:42:12 PM
1/25/2010 4:58:47 PM
I'm super non-religious.
1/25/2010 4:59:24 PM
1/25/2010 4:59:30 PM
1/25/2010 5:05:28 PM
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1/25/2010 5:52:14 PM