Many years ago, a poll showed in Europe, younger people are less likely to get involve in the organized religious.
Have not heard much follow up since. I think this is an inevitable trend, just the matter of how fast.
This, may, even will affect Isalamic world, but it will be so much slower and keep that portion of the world population stay much longer behind the rest.
2007-02-15
02:32:15
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12 answers
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asked by
Tia T
3
in
Politics & Government
➔ Politics
Sonny:
You have a master, but you were raised in a sad pass-on family. They brain wash you early on, and you did not have a choice then.
This is the sad cycle that will continue the degrading life style in the Islamic world and some so-called Christians in this country.
2007-02-15
02:59:57 ·
update #1
I'm not so sure that it will decline beyond
a certain threshhold - the fundamentals
of wanting to know why we are here
will remain.
However, yes, I do believe that organized
idealog based religions will continue to
decline.
And good riddance.
2007-02-15 02:36:45
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answer #1
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answered by Elana 7
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I think everyone would like to believe that there is a supreme being looking out for us. I surely know that I would like to believe this.
But, what is sad is that as science progresses it makes it had to have blind faith that we were created by anything other than chance.
The whole heaven and hell thing was "created" a few thousand years ago. Before that most people around the world worshiped the land, the sun and a variety of other "Gods".
I hope there is a God..... I just wrestle with the concept.
2007-02-15 02:41:09
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answer #2
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answered by Dog Lover 7
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College enrollment is at an all-time peak and college students today are far more likely to be religious than even the generation before them. Students are also more likely to pursue more demanding degrees. You can look all of this up.
Atheists that I have encountered are generally fundamentally intelligent but not usually brilliant and they are typically insecure about their intelligence. Therefore, they refuse to engage questions about our origin and destiny. It is comfortable for them to debate from a point of view supported by what is immediately obvious as it is easy for them to defend.
I demand a little more from myself and I am therefore agnostic. I do firmly believe that things are not what they seem and that there is something else going on in the cosmos but that is another discussion.
2007-02-15 02:47:40
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answer #3
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answered by BluntForceTrauma 3
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I wish it were true... but in the past 2k years the closest we've come to achieving this was the Enlightenment.. and then there was a backlash towards religion after that.. human culture cycles.. as does strength of religious holds.. the world will never be free of the hypocrisy of organized religion. (I'm not saying there is no God.. I believe there is... I'm a Deist... just saying organized religion is full of hypocrites.. not everyone.. but too many.)
2007-02-15 02:45:15
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answer #4
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answered by pip 7
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bigger practise brings approximately 3 issues. a million. the only difficulty you comprehend for specific is which you don't comprehend something for specific. This certainly brings approximately Agnosticism at ultimate and lots greater probable Atheism. 2. group think of tank. The ironic purpose of better practise is to have the skill to think of in my view. the challenge is, the way it incredibly is "carried out" is thru examining the comparable group of books, severe articles and listening to the comparable concentrated visitor academics . 3. Enforced tolerance. all your state universities now have needed classes which contain an practise in tolerance. mutually because it incredibly is unquestionably an attempt at assisting human beings comprehend themselves and their variations, the emphasis interior the coursework is often on those variations and the unfavorable outcomes intolerance has created (as though we are no longer already painfully attentive to all of the terrible acts completed interior the call of religion). The consistent reminder and concentration on the undesirable, breeds persevered hostility, organic and straightforward. consequently, a decline in religious concept.
2016-10-02 04:28:53
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Maybe. Personally, I think there's nothing wrong with religion. I don't personally have a need for organized religion in my life, but to some (my grandmother having been one), it's a tremendous comfort and stabilizing presence in their lives.
It's when religion gets extreme that it's dangerous. Religion, in and of itself, is completely innocuous. It's the morons who misinterpret the ancient writings to mean that we need to kill one another who are dangerous.
2007-02-15 02:46:23
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answer #6
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answered by Bush Invented the Google 6
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Believe what you want, everyone has that right.
It has been said that Satan's greatest weapon is that people don't believe in him.
Me I am more of a spiritualist, the golden rule, I help when I can, and I believe that it will keep my soul on the right path.
2007-02-15 02:41:06
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answer #7
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answered by snowball45830 5
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Correct. Religion is on decline in the US due to education and science advancement. Spirituality is becoming the norm and people are becoming more tolerant.
2007-02-15 02:36:29
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answer #8
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answered by Kookoo Bananas 1
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If 86% of Americans believe in God, what makes you think only uneducated people believe in him?
I have a masters, I'm Christian and liberal.
2007-02-15 02:37:00
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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seems like it will, unless the religions start getting rid of all the wack jobs, and find people who have some common sense.
2007-02-15 02:38:00
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answer #10
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answered by sydb1967 6
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