Religion may not be genetic, but in nine out of ten cases, it IS passed from parent to child. Parents who take their kids to church/synagogue/mosque each week will probably find their kids continue this into adulthood, thus the relgion continues, even if the actual faith/belief (within the individual) doesn't.
Anyway, I was hoping to see just what the viewpoint was on minority religions, as per the title, unless I read it wrong? I do see a distinction thought between the "big three" and most other religions, in that the others tend to see themselves as one option, not THE option, which the big three do. They see themselves as right, and everyone else wrong. I`d be very interested to see the viewpoint on say Hinduism, Buddhism, even norse relgion, Shinto etc etc...as I often see atheism being used (rightly enough) to engage the wrongdoings of the big three...
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Anyway, I was hoping to see just what the viewpoint was on minority religions, as per the title, unless I read it wrong? I do see a distinction thought between the "big three" and most other religions, in that the others tend to see themselves as one option, not THE option, which the big three do. They see themselves as right, and everyone else wrong. I`d be very interested to see the viewpoint on say Hinduism, Buddhism, even norse relgion, Shinto etc etc...as I often see atheism being used (rightly enough) to engage the wrongdoings of the big three...