Winstonm, on 2011-May-14, 10:31, said:
I think you are using a definition that fits your views. My understanding is that secular means specifically without overtly religious views. I have already acknowledged that secular views on morality can mirror religious views, but the reason is not based on the belief in god.
For example, the state viewpoint that women should not show their faces in public because it is forbidden by god is strictly a religious point of view. A secular government has no business deciding whether or not there is a god or whether the order truly came from god - the secular government simply makes a decision on whether or not there is objective evidence that women should not show their faces.
It is the theocratic government that converts religious laws into societal laws.
The distinction between a nation of laws and a nation of men is the basis for a constitutional republic that most do not understand. The constitution protects the rights of the minority from the whims of a majority. It doesn't matter if 99% of the population wants Christian prayer in schools - the establishment clause of the constitution prevents rampant democracy from establishing those prayers via mob rule, as long as the rule of law is in place. Without that rule of law, you can end up with a country like Iran and its theocracy.
For these reasons, my thinking is that the religious argument that stem cell research should be banned because of the human soul established at the point of inception is not something a government has any business making a decision concerning - this is like the recent gathering of cardinals to discuss the question of what happens to babies who die without baptism: an impossible question to answer with anything other that religious opinion.
Just as "a woman can't show her face because god forbids it", the mirror argument that "you can't kill stem cells because god forbids it" is one that a secular government has no reason to address.
If faithful want that law, they have to make a secular argument and not simply claim, "god says no!"
Secular has been used to mean a wide range of things. The working definition I gave above is based on that of the National Secular Society in the UK. You can read it
here.
What you say above about the "whims of the majority" is partly true, but very disingenuous. Every democracy since Athens has avoid pure forms of democracy, for precisely this reason. There are a great many rules and regulation in place in attempts to prevent knee jerk reactions to events. Nevertheless, a key concept in the idea of whim's is that they are transient. By making it difficult to change the constitution you insure that "whims" are never enacted. However, equating "whims" with broad public consensus is disingenuous. It remains the case that there is no law, or constitutional right, that cannot be overturned if you can get enough votes, and this is as it should be, for living citizens should not be forever constrained by the wishes of previous generations. From Wikipedia:
"Unlike amendments to most constitutions, amendments to the United States Constitution are appended to the body of the text without altering or removing what already exists. (However, in cases where newer text clearly contradicts older text, the newer text is given precedence. For instance, the Twenty-first Amendment repealed the Eighteenth Amendment.) Technically, nothing prevents a future amendment from actually changing the older text, rather than simply appending text to the end."
Ultimately, in all forms of democracy, the state acts because it is "the will of the people". The point of a secular state is that it does not concern itself with the motivations of the citizens. They vote, and that is what the state is obligated to do. Your example of the face covering is enlightening. Do you imagine that the law banning the hijab in France would have been passed if there was widespread public opposition? You are right that the state does not wonder about whether or not God commanded it. They looked at opinion polls to decided whether the majority thought about people being anonymous in public places, and when they found that the ban enjoyed wide public support, they passed it. The motivations were not important, only the votes.
If the faithful want a law, they need to get the required number of votes as are needed in your political system. In practice it normally means that if you can get 50% of people to support something you can get it passed, but the line is somewhat arbitary, even if it was 66% as it is for constitutional amendments you can still get the votes.
The physics is theoretical, but the fun is real. - Sheldon Cooper