Yeah, that happens—a fair number of the born-again narratives I’ve come across read like that. But the reason I was thinking of this group in particular is that, for a lot of people on the post-Christian agnostic spectrum, organized religions really are the bad guys: nondenominational Christianity is usually given a pass, but actual churches get blamed for all sorts of stuff. That’s a nontrivial obstacle for someone raised in that milieu.
Dharmic religions don’t seem to count as “organized” in this context, for reasons which are kind of opaque to me but probably have to do with exoticism. So I expect a lot of Western Buddhists and Hindus come out of this sort of space too—n=1, but that’s more or less how my college roommate found Hinduism.
Dharmic religions don’t seem to count as “organized” in this context, for reasons which are kind of opaque to me but probably have to do with exoticism.
Unfortunately, radical Islam also frequently gets a similar pass on grounds of exoticism, not to mention being a “victim of the crusades and the war on terror”.
Yeah, that happens—a fair number of the born-again narratives I’ve come across read like that. But the reason I was thinking of this group in particular is that, for a lot of people on the post-Christian agnostic spectrum, organized religions really are the bad guys: nondenominational Christianity is usually given a pass, but actual churches get blamed for all sorts of stuff. That’s a nontrivial obstacle for someone raised in that milieu.
Dharmic religions don’t seem to count as “organized” in this context, for reasons which are kind of opaque to me but probably have to do with exoticism. So I expect a lot of Western Buddhists and Hindus come out of this sort of space too—n=1, but that’s more or less how my college roommate found Hinduism.
Unfortunately, radical Islam also frequently gets a similar pass on grounds of exoticism, not to mention being a “victim of the crusades and the war on terror”.