J
Joan_of_Bark
Guest
Did they reach an objectively valid conclusion? If as adults they hold the same beliefs as they did as children, there’s really no way to know. Would you make that defense about third-generation Muslims? Or evangelicals?But Joan, you seem to be ignoring that the parents in question were raised under a belief system and despite that upbringing were able to review all the available info and reach an objectively valid conclusion.
I’m not sure what conclusion you’re referring to. In my OP I made the point that people tend to end up with the same religion they were raised with. I asked if this might mean that they had not actually considered the alternatives and were simply too indoctrinated to evaluate other beliefs. And as few here seem to have noticed, I mentioned that OTHER BELIEF SYSTEMS MIGHT BE ACCUSED OF THE SAME THING. Yet many answering this question seem to have taken the line that Catholicism is the truth, so of course that’s what children should be raised with.You havent presented a single reason for the parents to deviate from the upbringing that they had: one in which the parents belief system was used to provide something beneficial to the children and which allows them to pursue alternate beliefs in adulthood.
You seem to have refuted your own premise in the OP with this conclusion of yours.
If a Muslim said that Islam is the truth, so of course that’s what children should be raised with, and they should not be exposed to any other beliefs, would posters here defend them equally? Or would they see the Muslims as being close-minded? Or if I told you that my parents refused to expose me to Christianity because they were atheists (they weren’t), would Catholics defend them also?