Just for secular people. Here is a great parenting book on this type of subject.
http://www.amazon.com/Parentin...&qid=1217936164&sr=8-1
http://www.amazon.com/Parentin...&qid=1217936164&sr=8-1
Originally posted by: IGBT
..secular progressives want to dismiss all notions of morality, act on animal instinct and do it in the road. good luck with the kid.
Originally posted by: Fenixgoon
Originally posted by: Dumac
Originally posted by: sao123
denominations are not different religions. There are minor differences between them, but nothing which would invalidate one against another. They all believe the same thing.
Wrong; try again.
yeah, some denominations of christianity have very different beliefs, especially when it comes to literal vs liberal interpretation of the bible.
Originally posted by: Stiganator
My daughter lives with her mother for the most part. She became a born again Christian sort of person. I've noticed my daughter saying things that worry me. i.e. " I get so angry at those kings that worship idols. etc etc"
She is only 4 so it is difficult to explain the complexities of religion to her. I have told her that there are many different religions with many different gods i.e. Buddhists, Muslims, Hindus, etc. I'll ask her why she says some of the things she says and she says because it is the bible. I told her that some people believe everything in the bible and other people think it tells us stories that teach us how to be nice to each other.
How do you handle a situation like this? How do I prevent brainwashing and keep her mind open?
Originally posted by: child of wonder
My parents try to convert my 5 and 4 year old when they watch them. It really pisses me off having my 5 year old son tell me that there is a man in the sky called God and we have to thank him before we eat and that if I say differently I'M wrong.
Originally posted by: IGBT
..secular progressives want to dismiss all notions of morality, act on animal instinct and do it in the road. good luck with the kid.
Originally posted by: Bryophyte
he was NOT welcome to interfere with the rearing of MY children. :|
Originally posted by: fishjie
Originally posted by: Modelworks
You have never been involved in research then. It requires a great amount of faith and belief. Especially theoretical physics.
uh no it doesn't. faith is basically believing what you are told, never questioning that, and clinging on to that set doctrine of beliefs dogmatically and unthinkingly. that is not the scientific method. instead, science always seeks to verify its theories. when some result challenges a theory, then that theory is MODIFIED.
here is a simple pic to demonstrate the difference:
http://www.acorscadden.com/wp-.../science_vs_faith.jpg
Originally posted by: fishjie
Originally posted by: IGBT
..secular progressives want to dismiss all notions of morality, act on animal instinct and do it in the road. good luck with the kid.
try reading the bible sometime and tell me its a good source of morals with a straight face
commit any genocide lately?
Originally posted by: brandonb
Originally posted by: Stiganator
My daughter lives with her mother for the most part. She became a born again Christian sort of person. I've noticed my daughter saying things that worry me. i.e. " I get so angry at those kings that worship idols. etc etc"
She is only 4 so it is difficult to explain the complexities of religion to her. I have told her that there are many different religions with many different gods i.e. Buddhists, Muslims, Hindus, etc. I'll ask her why she says some of the things she says and she says because it is the bible. I told her that some people believe everything in the bible and other people think it tells us stories that teach us how to be nice to each other.
How do you handle a situation like this? How do I prevent brainwashing and keep her mind open?
Sounds like you are the one with a close mind who wants to poison your child with intolerance. In fact, you are the one who wants to brainwash her.
She is 4, you can't bring anything to her logically, or debate with her, and in the end... Who really cares? When she gets older she'll make a decision one way or another.
Originally posted by: fishjie
Originally posted by: Modelworks
You have never been involved in research then. It requires a great amount of faith and belief. Especially theoretical physics.
uh no it doesn't. faith is basically believing what you are told, never questioning that, and clinging on to that set doctrine of beliefs dogmatically and unthinkingly. that is not the scientific method. instead, science always seeks to verify its theories. when some result challenges a theory, then that theory is MODIFIED.
here is a simple pic to demonstrate the difference:
http://www.acorscadden.com/wp-.../science_vs_faith.jpg
Originally posted by: Modelworks
Originally posted by: fishjie
Originally posted by: Modelworks
You have never been involved in research then. It requires a great amount of faith and belief. Especially theoretical physics.
uh no it doesn't. faith is basically believing what you are told, never questioning that, and clinging on to that set doctrine of beliefs dogmatically and unthinkingly. that is not the scientific method. instead, science always seeks to verify its theories. when some result challenges a theory, then that theory is MODIFIED.
here is a simple pic to demonstrate the difference:
http://www.acorscadden.com/wp-.../science_vs_faith.jpg
You are talking about blind faith, which I do not believe in.
Spend some time actually doing research. Sometimes you get an idea that you can't verify with science right at that moment. Its just an idea based on what you already know. You have to believe in that idea and have faith in it to keep doing the research until something proves otherwise. If all we did was say "Well I can't prove it based on science so I must be wrong", then the majority of discoveries would never happen.
It is not about faith in a being, but in an idea. If you can't look beyond the current science your going to make a very poor scientist.