As such, you undoubtedly know
all about religious dogma and Holy Scripture.
They usually don't even have half a clue about the ideas, evidence and science they are rejecting and they know even less
about the religious dogma they are backing up.
Not exact matches
Right wing
religious extremists don't care
about the scientific process all they want to do is promote the
dogma.
It's not that I disagree with you
about keeping religion out of schools (public schools, ones not set up specifically by a
religious community for their community and paid for by that community), but
dogma is what you also both adhere to and propagate, so you might want to rephrase.
When particular elements in the traditional teaching
about the nature of things have been challenged by demonstrable scientific findings, the whole structure of
religious dogma has been called into question.
In other words, the fact that so many people can be swayed by
religious myths and
religious dogma helps us understand why the world is so messed up — people can be talked into just
about anything, including things that are bad for them.
At its core, however, there's a powerful story being told
about how extreme,
religious dogma can both shape and ruin us.
When push comes to shove, is this debate really
about the symbolic denigration of a
religious practice, or is the worry that once some parents find out
about the risks, they'll reject received
dogma and discard the practice?
All along the way, attitudes
about children and parenting practices were largely influenced by strict
religious dogma or experts in the fields of psychology and human development.
But instead of attending more closely to these circumstances in order to think seriously
about the changing place and politics of free speech in contemporary India, its proponents have lapsed into an anachronistic narrative
about circumscribing the reach of
religious dogma in social life.
I am not talking here
about the limiting beliefs of
religious or political
dogma, which for so long have shackled humanity into fear, guilt and disempowerment, and could have their own long discussion.
Mr. Turban urged teachers to find ways short of teaching
religious dogma to tell students
about their faith.
In Only the Paranoid Survive — Andrew Grove — then Intel's president — listed the reasons why Intel did nothing for a full year: Numerous factories, thousands of employees — and «
religious dogmas» within Intel
about «memories as the backbone of our manufacturing and sales activity.»