ReligionForBreakfast | Religion and the No True Scotsman Fallacy @ReligionForBreakfast | Uploaded 5 years ago | Updated 18 hours ago
Religion is a tough subject to study. One of the reasons why is because we bring our own preconceptions about particular religions to the subject. Our stereotypes affect how we interpret different religious traditions. This can lead to the No True Scotsman Fallacy.
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You can also donate to the show at: paypal.me/religionforbreakfast
For religious studies book recommendations, see: amazon.com/shop/religionforbreakfast
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Inspired by a blog post by Joseph Laycock and Natasha Mikles
http://bulletin.equinoxpub.com/2018/05/name-it-and-disclaim-it-a-tool-for-better-discussion-in-religious-studies
John Oliver piece on Ashin Wirathu: youtube.com/watch?v=OjPYmEZxACM&t=449s
Harvard Religious Literacy Project Video: https://rlp.hds.harvard.edu/for-educators/videos-teaching
Religion is a tough subject to study. One of the reasons why is because we bring our own preconceptions about particular religions to the subject. Our stereotypes affect how we interpret different religious traditions. This can lead to the No True Scotsman Fallacy.
Become a member of our Patreon community!: patreon.com/religionforbreakfast
You can also donate to the show at: paypal.me/religionforbreakfast
For religious studies book recommendations, see: amazon.com/shop/religionforbreakfast
Follow me on:
Twitter @andrewmarkhenry
www.facebook.com/religionforbreakfast
Inspired by a blog post by Joseph Laycock and Natasha Mikles
http://bulletin.equinoxpub.com/2018/05/name-it-and-disclaim-it-a-tool-for-better-discussion-in-religious-studies
John Oliver piece on Ashin Wirathu: youtube.com/watch?v=OjPYmEZxACM&t=449s
Harvard Religious Literacy Project Video: https://rlp.hds.harvard.edu/for-educators/videos-teaching