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**Avoid truth assertions** | |
We want a site that welcomes people of all perspectives, as our site description says. | |
This broadens the appeal of the site (though of course we don't want a free-for-all). | |
This site focuses on the *text* and the | |
process of interpreting it, using the tools of (at least) grammar, linguistics, history, | |
archaeology, science, and comparison with other texts. None of that is inherently | |
religious, and that non-dependence on a religious foundation is what | |
*distinguishes* BH from other sites in the SE network. | |
Our goal should be: (a) don't make truth statements unless your argument requires it, | |
and (b) if your argument *does* require it, qualify those statements. Saying "according to X" | |
instead of just "X" provides important context that may not be otherwise obvious. | |
It also leaves room for the same answer to then say "but according to Y" and | |
"and according to Z". An answer that can bring multiple perspectives and compare/contrast | |
them is a very strong answer. | |
Because we are focused on the text and the process, not on religious application, | |
assertions of religious truth ("dogma") are not helpful in answers: they can't be | |
examined, proven or disproven, or dug into the same way that other assertions can be. | |
In addition, their presence weakens the answer for any reader who does not agree with | |
the truth of those assertions. At best such assertions boil down to "because I say so". | |
*Answers of this type fundamentally fail the "show your work" site guideline.* | |
Further, welcoming these kinds of truth assertions drives away some key types of | |
users, to the detriment of the site. Two top users (and a third newer one) have | |
posted about the problematic nature of a site that welcomes dogma, and several knowledgeable | |
Jews who have declined to participate here have | |
[explained](http://meta.hermeneutics.stackexchange.com/q/592/208) that this is a factor. | |
Allowing truth assertions makes this a de-facto Christian site due to demographics, | |
and contributions bringing the rabbinic, Hebrew-bible-based perspective will be | |
limited to Christians who have also studied this material. **Allowing religious assertions | |
of truth reduces the chances of getting the broad content we say we want.** | |
Opponents will argue that we already welcome all perspectives, and that's true to the extent | |
that "welcome" means "accept questions and answers from". But that's not really welcoming; | |
that's tolerance. To be truly *welcoming* we should | |
be striving to *not unnecessarily make people uncomfortable*. It's the difference between | |
saying "sure you can come in" and actually being *hospitable*, which sometimes means voluntarily | |
restricting oneself *in this setting* (not in every aspect of one's life) for the sake of the | |
greater good. It means the online equivalent of not blowing cigarette smoke in the allergic | |
person's face, or turning off the R-rated movie when young children are visiting, or saving the | |
family-specific conversation for a time when only family is present. That's good manners. | |
As noted in the question, no matter what we do some people will feel uncomfortable and leave. | |
If we move toward this answer's goal then we will lose anyone who feels a strong conviction | |
to present religious truth. One top Christian user is on record as saying that if he has | |
to qualify truth statements he'd feel unable to participate according to his conscience. | |
This appears to be a minority view among Christians; many other Christians participate | |
here without making these kinds of assertions. If a few Christian users leave then, | |
while that's disappointing, we have not lost their perspective. On the other hand, if | |
we allow these kinds of truth assertions, we risk losing some non-Christian perspectives | |
entirely. | |
Another answer points out that our traffic is growing, one measure of success, | |
as support for the current trajectory. Another important measure is user participation; | |
if users don't continue to supply new, quality content, then eventually visits will drop | |
off (nothing new to see). Area 51 | |
[lists](http://area51.stackexchange.com/proposals/1817?phase=beta&users=mostactive#tab-top) | |
"top users" based on participation (not just reputation); of the top 10, four are inactive | |
and one more has a long record of low-quality posts. The next 10 don't fare much better; | |
more than half of them contribute minimally or not at all now. *This trend should concern us.* | |
This is not about individuals. There is no outcome that will please everyone and we need to | |
recognise that whatever we choose will suit some and alienate others. This is not the aim of | |
course but we must persue the best long-term goal for the site. |
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