In a society originally rooted in Christianity conservatism is going to generally be closer to Christian values, just as in a society originally rooted in Confucianism conservatism is going to be closer to Confucian values. But we sometimes have to adjust our conservatism in the light of Scripture.
There was a massive and explicit rejection of Christ in the 1960s as we know and that has continued to work itself out. Some of the music was good, most of the rest was bad.
You, two professors, are seriously questioning why more intelligent people are overly represented in a UNIVERSITY???? Meanwhile, on a world scale, you two are members of a relatively tiny SECTARIAN bubble. Why are you not complaining about being underrepresented in Christianity?
Prof. Barth gave statistics to support the problem of bias in the university. These were connected to political views in the United States and not Christianity. We will be looking at philosophical bias in our next video which might be more relevant for your comment.
I don't see where either of us stated that there is an overrepresentation of "more intelligent people" in the university. We stated that there is an overrepresentation of people with a left-wing worldview in the university.
In a society originally rooted in Christianity conservatism is going to generally be closer to Christian values, just as in a society originally rooted in Confucianism conservatism is going to be closer to Confucian values. But we sometimes have to adjust our conservatism in the light of Scripture.
I think we're just at a period of history where Christianity appears to be the underdog. Not another one!
There was a massive and explicit rejection of Christ in the 1960s as we know and that has continued to work itself out. Some of the music was good, most of the rest was bad.
You, two professors, are seriously questioning why more intelligent people are overly represented in a UNIVERSITY????
Meanwhile, on a world scale, you two are members of a relatively tiny SECTARIAN bubble. Why are you not complaining about being underrepresented in Christianity?
Prof. Barth gave statistics to support the problem of bias in the university. These were connected to political views in the United States and not Christianity. We will be looking at philosophical bias in our next video which might be more relevant for your comment.
I don't see where either of us stated that there is an overrepresentation of "more intelligent people" in the university. We stated that there is an overrepresentation of people with a left-wing worldview in the university.