Belinda wrote:Immanuel Can, I see that I have not explained very well.
Well, please...feel free to expatiate as necessary. That's the great thing about conversation; it's revisable and adjustable if we find ourselves misunderstood. No problem.
The above is the dichotomy which separates diverse religionists far more than division according to sect. I am not attempting details or quantification I'm suggesting this as a more realisitic model than differentiation sect by sect.
It still doesn't quite work, at least not if we put in the "political" axis. For many "fundamentalist" groups are very shy of politicking. Hassidim, JW's and so on are examples. On the other hand, Liberal sects are often highly political, eschewing doctrine and private piety in favour of campaigning for their particular "social justice" causes. Ironically, some of the most "fundamental" groups are the
least politically dangerous, and some of the Liberal ones are the
most strident. Of course, the reverse is true in Islam: there, the fundamentalists are
most dangerous, as "fundamental" there means "obedient to the Koran, Sharia, the clerics, and the (rather bloodthirsty) career and example of Mohammed."
You've always got to look at the particulars, I think: just exactly WHAT is it they are believing, not only HOW are they believing it. Believing with fervency or even fundamentalism is not in itself a problem: but believing
bad things that way certainly is. And on the contrary, believing Liberalism can entail a fervency that far exceeds many of the most conservative fundamentalists. Sometimes there's nothing so blind as a Liberal who thinks he's "seen" something other people aren't "getting."
When I wrote that politicians need creeds I did not mean religious creeds but creeds in its general meaning to refer to all belief systems which are established by some authority which in the case of politicians is usually the party executive.
Okay. But what ideology is ever established without "some authority"? It seems to me that as many unthinking Atheists worship at the shrine of Dawkins or the mausoleum of Hitchens as inhabit Lourdes.
Case in point: in fact, the latter has such mystical authority that they nearly held a witch-burning for Larry Taunton, just for being Hitchens' friend and proposing that by the time he died he was open to further thought on religion. Almost to a person, these detractors had never read Taunton's book at all, but went after him with fiery zeal anyway. "The heresy!" they seemed to cry, "he's said our boy wasn't quite the smug, self-confident derider of religion we saw on stage! Burn the witch."

Apparently, then, Atheism can be fanatical too, and is just as dogmatic about its "authorities" as any religion ever is.
I would say this: in the case of ideology or religion, it's both
what they believe AND the
way they believe it; not one or the other. Leave out one of those polarities, and we always end up making false claims, claims that do injustice to some division, sect or group.
In fact, I think you'll find that fanaticism isn't grouped along neat sectarian lines at all...especially political fanaticism.