Useful, like a theoretical construct that doesn't actually exist?
But this is a broad policy we require--that is what makes the first two questions here irrelevant. Individual atheists judges can be horribly prejudiced, and individual christian judges can be paragons of justice. But if, on the whole, prayer being an integral part of a governmental proceeding is a significant biasing factor, then the practice should be stopped.Who says the atheist only has an un-emotional prejudice? Or that the Christian judge isn't using his practical expereince of the Church to inform his decision? It comes down, as I said, wholly to the quality of the judge and how he uses his experience.
The kind where he raises both hands and repeats "it is the power of Christ himself compels you" over and over to the defendantAs to his paying every day, and what this reflects, that would depend entirely on the type of prayer he was ingaged in, be it liturgical, affective, diadactic or contemplative. I am assuming from your comment that you don't have any direct expereince of varied forms of prayer, and you may be thinking of the more recent fashion for ecstatic prayer5, which is different again.
Do you suppose a post-Christian philosophy is the same as a post-Islamic one? Modern British Law and its distinction between guilty action and guilty intent were born in the confessional around 1000 AD, while the modern atheist demand for Freedom of concience has it's root in the dissenter's demand for the same in the wake of the Reformation and under the influence of the original Humanists. How different would our institutions be if we had an Islamic tradition of a deterministic religion to build on instead of the Christian tradition of Free Will?
We won't know until we haver a post-Islamic society to consider.
That seems separate from what we are talking about. Doesn't post-christian philosophy (based on the work of christian philosophers) include a separation of church and state? So why backtrack because it turned out well?
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