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User:Lic. Carlos most statistics put the percentage of Catholics between 48% to 60%, Here is a Example
the date of the 2019 Eurobarometer simply does not fit with that of the past years, The Ipsos Group is a global market research from France[note 1] I agree that the Eurobarometer is generally a good source, I liked that you added it, but you can't just remove the other statistics because you considered it outdated.(The Sr Guy (talk) 17:58, 22 January 2020 (UTC)).
You say:
"...the date of the 2019 Eurobarometer simply does not fit with that of the past years, The Ipsos Group is a global market research from France[note 1] I agree that the Eurobarometer is generally a good source, I liked that you added it, but you can't just remove the other statistics because you considered it outdated..."
Actually it was you who distorted the chronology of surveys by adding pie charts with data already present in the article text itself, I did not "remove" any statistics, you distorted the chronology claiming that a survey from 2017 was more valid than the one of Eurobarometer with data collected only months ago (year 2019). Here you do not mention the Pew Research Center survey you tried to make believe was from 2018 with the argument that it was not "outdated". Pew Research Center surveys are very uneven, some are good and proffesional, others not. Anyway, in order to settle this issue, you can keep your two pie charts in the page, but respect the chronology of surveys. The colour for Catholics is also too dark, I prefer DarkOrchid to avoid confusion with the black for non-respondents.--Lic. Carlos (talk) 18:48, 22 January 2020 (UTC)
This article is getting bigger and thus the "Christianity" section is long enough to have its own article. I will move the contents to "Christianity in France. Sesroh Fo Maerd I (talk) 19:43, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
Hello, I'd thought I'd just warn people on here to not revert the edit I made about the Eurobarometer citation because I read through the whole thing, and there was no evidence of France's opinion on God and Life Force. The polls provided with these options was not France and the whole survey was about what religious leaders are doing to impact society, whether it's been positive or negative. That was the main article, not debating on an existence of a life force or deity. In future, please, please be careful when giving out this information as you could always end up with misconceptions and misunderstandings, which would then lead to disagreements. Please read the citation properly first before adding it to the page. I hope everyone understands. MountainLaurel88 (talk) 14:10, 27 November 2020 (UTC)
The long paragraph about the Nouvelle Droite in Paganism seems to be undue weight, relevant for a different article. No other denomination's section is given a long paragraph about an extremist fringe, and here it has no balancing with other more common beliefs. If included it would require a balanced overview of all political groups in Paganism too - which is likely beyond the scope of this article, if the other denominations are to be used as example. Does anyone contest or have an alternative solution? Vaurnheart (talk) 12:26, 13 May 2021 (UTC)
A discussion is taking place to address the redirect Oriental Orthodoxy in France. The discussion will occur at Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion/Log/2021 November 24#Oriental Orthodoxy in France until a consensus is reached, and readers of this page are welcome to contribute to the discussion. Veverve (talk) 00:06, 24 November 2021 (UTC)
separate non-religion to:
The undeclared view already exists.
Religion isn't the most inclusive hypernym.
Physicalism (Deutschian/ David Deutsch's physicalism, logicophysicalism and not mind-monism philosophical physicalism which starts correctly but may have too many interpretational multifurcations)/atheism aren't...
I return to the subject: Physicalism/atheism aren't religions. They don't include violations of rigorous causality and procedurality (that impossibility = unteachable, unreachable and fundamentally without rigorous attributes; it doesn't meet the axiomatic prerequisites for physical foundations = that impossibility is the supernatural).
Physicalism/atheism are metaphysical worldviews.
Religions also are metaphysical worldviews.
The term metaphysical worldview is hypernymic to physicalism/atheism and supernaturalism/religion.
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According to Bertrand Russell atheism is rationalist agnosticism (because knowledge is infinite). Rationalist agnosticism (versus general agnosticism [open to logicalism/atheism and illogicalism/supernaturalism/religion]) recognizes the necessity of logic in the physical foundations and the foundations of everything that exists. Thus we have the duty to represent communities with different opinions.
Mistake