V6Chuk wrote:You are right, I don't think in law we can refuse someone jury service on religious grounds alone, however laws can and sometime should be changed. How in the 21st century can we trust the judgments and faculties of people who are guided in life by Bronze Age superstition?
You don't trust the majority of the human race then? Atheists and the irreligious are in the minority, and always have been. Estimates vary that between 80-84% of the world's population follow a religion of some form.
I've always wondered, do those slating religion (as certain folk so love to on here) truly believe they are the insightful minority and the majority of the human race throughout known history is, and always has been, gullible and deluded?
As you say though, religion is a funny human trait. Even casual research into the origins and history of religion and the twists, turns and blatant cons that have taken place throughout human history tell you there are many enormous flaws to the God argument. Yet billions still visit places of worship every day.
FWIW, I don't think religion should be a factor in law. I've sworn in as a witness twice with no reference to God.
V6Chuk wrote:I'm not sure how anyone who has a history of being unable to deal with facts in coherent and rational way, (something I always imagined is a must for a juror and something religious folk seem to have a constant problem with), can be relied upon to produce a valid conclusion based on the predicates presented to them? I suppose in a similar way a witness who is shown to be inconsistent or a liar is considered unreliable.
It's not black or white though. Some religious folk go through the motions, some use the church simply as a community centre, some have a genuine but casual belief, some follow their religions to the letter, some are aggressively religious. It's an infinite range and in between you have just as many interpretations and individual meanings of religion.
You think religious people are unable to deal with facts because they believe in a God? You think many judges, solicitors, teachers, engineers, scientists, soldiers, doctors, surgeons, nurses, computer programmers, etc, etc, etc, aren't religious? These people, and many others, kind of need to deal with and make judgements based on facts and their religious beliefs are probably irrelevant. There are always exceptions of course, as I'm sure someone will point out.
BTW, I'm not religious. I was taken to church as a child and had a brush with 'born-again' Christianity as a young and befuddled teenager, but those things are many years behind me. I simply see no need to jump on the 'beating religion to a pulp' bandwagon, as right-on as that might make me - unless stupid people use it to demand stupid things, as seems to be all the rage in the States right now.
Fact is, the judge wanted to see this woman's face and she didn't want to show it. Perhaps she had a big spot on her nose. No issue.