Pick a bunch of passages about ethics from several sources—the Bible, the Koran, Buddhist writings, secular writings, etc.
Have her read them, but don’t tell her which ones are which. Have her write down her thoughts and feelings about each one, whether she thinks they stand up to logical scrutiny. Then after, tell her the sources of them and ask her whether she might reconsider.
Of course, you’d have to select them carefully so that there are no obvious giveaways (e.g. mentioning God), and also you should be careful not to cherrypick sources that make secularism look good and religion look bad.
There must be a way to write a script to do this automatically, and there must be someone who has the skills and text files already at their disposal to do this.
I think that’d be difficult, unless you manage to find a source that’s already mined a lot of religious texts for ethical instruction and put them down in a common format; it’s not like there are any obvious textual markers of ethics that you could plug into, say, a Gutenberg search.
I suppose you could grep for stuff along the lines of “good” or “moral” or “the superior man”, but that’d miss a lot of stuff and include a lot of other stuff with obvious markers of religion in it.
Pick a bunch of passages about ethics from several sources—the Bible, the Koran, Buddhist writings, secular writings, etc.
Have her read them, but don’t tell her which ones are which. Have her write down her thoughts and feelings about each one, whether she thinks they stand up to logical scrutiny. Then after, tell her the sources of them and ask her whether she might reconsider.
Of course, you’d have to select them carefully so that there are no obvious giveaways (e.g. mentioning God), and also you should be careful not to cherrypick sources that make secularism look good and religion look bad.
There must be a way to write a script to do this automatically, and there must be someone who has the skills and text files already at their disposal to do this.
I think that’d be difficult, unless you manage to find a source that’s already mined a lot of religious texts for ethical instruction and put them down in a common format; it’s not like there are any obvious textual markers of ethics that you could plug into, say, a Gutenberg search.
I suppose you could grep for stuff along the lines of “good” or “moral” or “the superior man”, but that’d miss a lot of stuff and include a lot of other stuff with obvious markers of religion in it.
I was just thinking you’d search random passages and remove ones with “god” or whatever in them.
I guess my conception of what goes on in holy texts is probably not quite on spot.