We may have to agree to disagree about whether my statement was condescending. And I do see the faith-based decision paradigm (as opposed to any individual decision -- obviously there will be many instances when both paradigms lead to the same decision) as directly contrary to the evidence-based decision paradigm because the whole point of "faith," as I understand that term, is that faith describes a belief to which one adheres, and acts on, no matter how much contrary evidence mounts against the belief.Beebs52 wrote:Faith based doesn't necessarily erase evidence based decisions. They are not mutually exclusive. Yes, it was condescending.Bob78164 wrote:I don't think so. I'm fairly sure that Tocque would cheerfully agree that no amount of evidence could possibly shake her beliefs (she might use the word "faith") on this issue. The remaining statements I made either describe my own reaction to that world view (in response to Tocque's guess about why people who share my views have such strong feelings on the subject) or make the (I believe) uncontroversial statement that enough people make faith-based, rather than evidence-based, decisions to affect public policy. I don't see how any of that is condescending. --BobBeebs52 wrote: That's a bit condescending, no?
How about those folks who base their decisions on lobbyists, financial gain and miscreancy?
I don't understand the point of your final paragraph. People (particularly public servants) who make bad faith decisions based on venal considerations are simply breaching their trust, but that tells us nothing about whether they use faith or evidence what good public policy would be if they weren't breaching their trust. --Bob