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Census 2016 - Time to tick NO

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Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 828 ✭✭✭wokingvoter


    Absolam wrote: »
    Well... "What is your religious perspective" would allow the same answers (good for data management and consistency) but would allow "No Religion" to have the logical second position (suiting atheists who feel hard done by), I think? Not sure if anyone might think it's too vague and would lead to people ticking Catholic by mistake though...
    At the end of the day it might be considered kowtowing to a group that would be unthinkable if the group were Catholics, but still.

    There are only 3 answers to "What is your religious perspective?" imo.
    1. I am religious
    2. I'm not religious
    3. I don't know/care
    That won't help the CSO collate data on the increase/decrease in different religious practices though?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    What is your particular religious perspective then? Or specific religious perspective, maybe? That may invite too much detail from anti-theists though...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,784 ✭✭✭volchitsa


    There are only 3 answers to "What is your religious perspective?" imo.
    1. I am religious
    2. I'm not religious
    3. I don't know/care
    That won't help the CSO collate data on the increase/decrease in different religious practices though?
    Why exactly would they need to do that, though?

    If a church or a mosque says it needs to build a new church, say, and has the funding to do so, let them ask for planning permission like anybody else and go ahead. What's the problem? Is the CSO going to say Ah no there are already enough churches within a 50 km radius or something?

    Reem Alsalem UNSR Violence Against Women and Girls: "Very concerned about statements by the IOC at Paris2024 (M)ultiple international treaties and national constitutions specifically refer to women & their fundamental rights, so the world (understands) what women -and men- are. (H)ow can one assess fairness and justice if we do not know who we are being fair and just to?"



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,472 ✭✭✭Choochtown


    T
    No religion is the obvious option for an adult who is quite certain that they are , well, not religious.
    It's not hidden. It's there in black and white as plain as day.


    But it is hidden as I've pointed out earlier in this thread.

    Question 19 "How do you usually travel to work?" First box to tick "Not at work"
    Question 20 is the same format.

    Questions 7,9,11,27 are all set out in a similar way with choices and they all end with the white boxes for the "other" option

    Only in this highly contentious question is:
    (1) The second most common answer put last
    (2) There is another option after the fill in squares for "other"
    (3) There is a presumption for everyone to tick a religion (eg question 14 doesn't presume everyone can speak Irish. It doesn't ask: "How often do you speak Irish?" and then hide away the "I don't speak it" option after 2 rows of white squares.

    Added to this is the crazy decision not to put the question in the explanatory notes at the back. THE most contentious question on the census is not even explained at the back!!!

    Instead they used that space to explain question 22: "Do you provide regular unpaid help for a friend..?"
    They helpfully explain... "If you provide regular unpaid help ... you should mark box 1 (Yes)"
    Glad they cleared that one up. No wonder there was no room to explain the religion question!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    volchitsa wrote: »
    Why exactly would they need to do that, though?
    If a church or a mosque says it needs to build a new church, say, and has the funding to do so, let them ask for planning permission like anybody else and go ahead. What's the problem? Is the CSO going to say Ah no there are already enough churches within a 50 km radius or something?
    Probably a question better aimed at the CSO in fairness, but didn't a historian point out that the answers are of interest to historians at least? Perhaps the CSO do have some logical use for the question and no one has asked them what it is? No one who's saying on A&A, anyways...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Choochtown wrote: »
    But it is hidden as I've pointed out earlier in this thread.
    Question 19 "How do you usually travel to work?" First box to tick "Not at work"
    Question 20 is the same format.
    Questions 7,9,11,27 are all set out in a similar way with choices and they all end with the white boxes for the "other" option
    Only in this highly contentious question is:
    (1) The second most common answer put last
    (2) There is another option after the fill in squares for "other"
    (3) There is a presumption for everyone to tick a religion (eg question 14 doesn't presume everyone can speak Irish. It doesn't ask: "How often do you speak Irish?" and then hide away the "I don't speak it" option after 2 rows of white squares.
    Added to this is the crazy decision not to put the question in the explanatory notes at the back. THE most contentious question on the census is not even explained at the back!!!
    Instead they used that space to explain question 22: "Do you provide regular unpaid help for a friend..?"
    They helpfully explain... "If you provide regular unpaid help ... you should mark box 1 (Yes)"
    Glad they cleared that one up. No wonder there was no room to explain the religion question!
    I thought I answered those questions to your satisfaction the last time you asked, but obviously not :) I recall you'd decided to attack the CSO for negligence instead, but now you're saying they're crazy for providing information about answering the question online (and personally to respondents via the census enumerators) rather than on the form itself... which do you think really? Negligent or crazy? Can't be both...


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,472 ✭✭✭Choochtown


    Absolam wrote: »
    I thought I answered those questions to your satisfaction the last time you asked, but obviously not :) I recall you'd decided to attack the CSO for negligence instead, but now you're saying they're crazy for providing information about answering the question online (and personally to respondents via the census enumerators) rather than on the form itself... which do you think really? Negligent or crazy? Can't be both...


    It is indeed both. I posted that it was a "crazy decision"

    They are negligent for making such a crazy decision.


    Their job is to glean accurate information about the population. In this regard for this question they are negligent.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Choochtown wrote: »
    It is indeed both. I posted that it was a "crazy decision" They are negligent for making such a crazy decision. Their job is to glean accurate information about the population. In this regard for this question they are negligent.
    To what degree do you think providing advice on how to complete the question in person and online but not on the back of the form affects the result, and the usefulness of the result? Do you not think that if someone looks for clarification of a question on the form and doesn't find it, they won't look online, or ask their enumerator?
    Only I would think it would need to be a fairly significant degree before you could call it negligent. And since there is only advice on the back of the form for twelve of the forty seven questions, was it a negligently 'crazy decision' not to include advice for 75% of the questions? Is it possible there may be a logic to the questions chosen for explanation you're not aware of; like the logic to the construction of potential answers?


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,472 ✭✭✭Choochtown


    Absolam wrote: »
    To what degree do you think providing advice on how to complete the question in person and online but not on the back of the form affects the result, and the usefulness of the result? Do you not think that if someone looks for clarification of a question on the form and doesn't find it, they won't look online, or ask their enumerator?
    Only I would think it would need to be a fairly significant degree before you could call it negligent. And since there is only advice on the back of the form for twelve of the forty seven questions, was it a negligently 'crazy decision' not to include advice for 75% of the questions? Is it possible there may be a logic to the questions chosen for explanation you're not aware of; like the logic to the construction of potential answers?

    Really? You think a lot of people ask a form-collector for advice?

    You think people are going to search online for advice? Explanatory notes are given on the back of the Census form. The fact that the most misleading, contentious question (which when compared to other polls last time out was also the most inaccurate) is not given a space is gross negligence.

    Why would anyone look online? There isn't even a link given on the form!

    How were the 12 questions that are explained decided then? Randomly? I have already posted an example of how unnecessary one of the explanations is. The amount of differing opinions and interpretations of question 12 surely warrants a few lines at the back of the form.

    A survey asks a population (where 53% of the population claim not to be a religious person (Gallup 2011)) "What is your religion?"
    There is no explanation given on how to answer the question.
    Can you really not see anything wrong with that?

    I would love to hear any theories on the logic behind the questions chosen for the explanatory notes.

    Anyone?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,676 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    "What is your religion" is like the question 'When did you stop beating your wife'

    'I never beat my wife' does not answer the question, because it doesn't say when you stopped beating your wife. (incidentally, I still beat my wife, I'm actually beating her right now' is an equally non answer for the same reasons, as is 'I don't have a wife')

    You can't answer the question if you've never beaten your wife. You can only challenge the question itself.

    Asking a question that pre-supposes an answer is poor methodology.

    'Are you religious?' followed by 'If Yes, what religion are you' would get the most accurate results.

    Incidentally, religion thrives on presupposing that the 'questions' it asks about reality are valid questions.

    What is the 'meaning of life' presupposes that there is one meaning to life

    'Why are we here' presupposes that there is a transcendent purpose for our lives

    'Where did morality come from' presupposes that morality had to 'come from' anywhere instead of just being a concept invented by humans to explain human behaviour and the unwritten 'rules' governing our social interactions.

    The census isn't that important in the grand scheme of things (presupposing that there is a grand scheme) but it would be nice if the next census allowed a proper debate on the religion question so that it can better serve statisticians and policy makers of the future.

    They have no excuse. This census is a 'no change' census, the next one has to allow reasonable contributions on the question format.

    The campaign for reforming census 2021 should start the day after census 2016 is collected,


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Choochtown wrote: »
    Really? You think a lot of people ask a form-collector for advice? You think people are going to search online for advice? Explanatory notes are given on the back of the Census form.
    Really, I'm asking just how many of the people who need advice in completing the question won't look online or ask their enumerator, on finding it's not one of the 25% of questions with advice on the back of the form, yes. Or, at least, how much is the result affected by those that don't, in your opinion.
    Choochtown wrote: »
    The fact that the most misleading, contentious question (which when compared to other polls last time out was also the most inaccurate) is not given a space is gross negligence.
    Well... I'd be dubious about fact. I think we've covered off misleading already, but as for contentious, i suspect you're speaking from a very niche interest point of view; is there any reason to think that it's more contentious than any other question where groups have an interest in a particular result? Personally I suspect that beyond the anti-theists interest in the question is fairly minimal.
    Choochtown wrote: »
    Why would anyone look online? There isn't even a link given on the form!
    Because the term 'Google it' is practically synonymous with 'find out' these days?
    Choochtown wrote: »
    How were the 12 questions that are explained decided then? Randomly? I have already posted an example of how unnecessary one of the explanations is. The amount of differing opinions and interpretations of question 12 surely warrants a few lines at the back of the form.
    I don't know... you could ask the CSO since it's not likely they're random? I don't think not knowing why the chose the questions they did is a basis for claiming negligence though; it's just a basis for claiming you don't you why they chose they questions they did.
    Choochtown wrote: »
    A survey asks a population (where 53% of the population claim not to be a religious person (Gallup 2011)) "What is your religion?" There is no explanation given on how to answer the question.
    Can you really not see anything wrong with that?
    Well, I can see you think the Gallup poll is comparable, but you haven't given us a link to it so it's hard to say. I would say that the census actually covers everyone, whereas a poll covers a sample and extrapolates from that, so a census is obviously more accurate :)
    Additionally, if one 'survey' asked "Does religion occupy an important place in your life?" and another 'survey' asked "What is your religion" I'd expect to see different results, because they are different questions. It would seem obvious (if only apocryphally) that people can feel they have a religion, even if they don't feel it occupies an important place in their life, and that others might be quite clear that they don't have a religion, yet believe religion occupies a very important place in their life because they live in Ireland...
    Choochtown wrote: »
    I would love to hear any theories on the logic behind the questions chosen for the explanatory notes. Anyone?
    My theory is they're not random, but are based on a statistical assessment we're not privy to. The CSO might tell you the actual reasoning if you ask the right person :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Akrasia wrote: »
    "What is your religion" is like the question 'When did you stop beating your wife' 'I never beat my wife' does not answer the question, because it doesn't say when you stopped beating your wife. (incidentally, I still beat my wife, I'm actually beating her right now' is an equally non answer for the same reasons, as is 'I don't have a wife') You can't answer the question if you've never beaten your wife. You can only challenge the question itself.
    Which is why I think 'No Religion' is logically placed after all the potential answers to the actual question.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    Asking a question that pre-supposes an answer is poor methodology. 'Are you religious?' followed by 'If Yes, what religion are you' would get the most accurate results
    Not if you know from previous censuses that your pre-supposition is an accurate one; in the 2011 Census almost 93% of respondents noted they had a religion. Adding a question to satisfy the grammatical assiduity of 7% of respondents and thereby reducing statistical consistency in the series would seem to be much poorer methodology to me...
    Akrasia wrote: »
    Incidentally, religion thrives on presupposing that the 'questions' it asks about reality are valid questions. What <..> interactions.
    Yes, that definitely seems very incidental, if indicative that your thoughts on the current subject may not be wholly based on simply ensuring our civil servants have access to good statistical data :)
    Akrasia wrote: »
    The census isn't that important in the grand scheme of things (presupposing that there is a grand scheme) but it would be nice if the next census allowed a proper debate on the religion question so that it can better serve statisticians and policy makers of the future. They have no excuse. This census is a 'no change' census, the next one has to allow reasonable contributions on the question format. The campaign for reforming census 2021 should start the day after census 2016 is collected,
    I imagine the next Census will include any sensible, or needful changes that the CSO arrives at; whether it's sensible or needful to change that particular question is obviously debatable. My own view is it should be changed if the CSO concludes that more useful statistical data can be derived by changing rather than keeping it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,676 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    Absolam wrote: »
    Which is why I think 'No Religion' is logically placed after all the potential answers to the actual question.

    Not if you know from previous censuses that your pre-supposition is an accurate one; in the 2011 Census almost 93% of respondents noted they had a religion.

    You've just defeated your own argument

    The whole point of this entire thread, is that the question is poorly phrased and we can not trust that the results are accurate. So now you're saying that because people gave an untrustworthy answer in the last census that it justifies that same question being asked in this census?

    If the census in 2016 asked "When did you stop beating your wife' and the options were
    Last Month or sooner
    Last year or sooner
    Last year or greater
    I never stopped beating my wife

    If 93% of people tick the box 'I never stopped beating my wife' because it's the technically correct answer to anyone who has never started beating their wife and therefore never stopped, can you assume from that response that 93% of people are still beating their wife?

    93% of people ticked a box to state their religion, but they were never asked if they were religious, therefore, what is being measured is anything from cultural identity, to adopted faith, to the beliefs of the parents or whoever completes the form etc

    You have taken the 93% result from the last census to justify the current question which is used to assume that 93% of people have a religion, when it's obvious to anyone that there are more than 7% of people in Ireland who are not religious. 18% of people in Ireland attend mass regularly but 84% of people said they were Roman catholic. The circle does not fit in the square hole.

    The census question is clearly giving misleading results.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,160 ✭✭✭Huntergonzo


    Akrasia wrote: »
    The census question is clearly giving misleading results.

    Ah just shut up and be Catholic like the state wants you to be, 84% of people on this Island are 'catholic' don't you know. That's why mass attendance is 84% and 84% of people voted no to divorce and no to gay marriage and 84% of people also stone other people to death for working on the sabbath, just like the bible teaches.

    Anyway, is there no 'do you believe in God' question, and if not why not? Seems like an important one to me, considering that there are 'catholics' out there who don't even believe in God.

    'What is your religion' is a very presumptive and pious question.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Akrasia wrote: »
    You've just defeated your own argument
    The whole point of this entire thread, is that the question is poorly phrased and we can not trust that the results are accurate. So now you're saying that because people gave an untrustworthy answer in the last census that it justifies that same question being asked in this census?
    How exactly is it defeating my own argument? There's certainly an opinion being offered about how valid people think both the question and answers are; but whether or not people think they're trustworthy has no bearing on their consistency.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    If the census in 2016 asked "When did you stop beating your wife' and the options were Last Month or sooner Last year or sooner Last year or greater I never stopped beating my wife
    If 93% of people tick the box 'I never stopped beating my wife' because it's the technically correct answer to anyone who has never started beating their wife and therefore never stopped, can you assume from that response that 93% of people are still beating their wife?
    You can assume that the next time you ask the question, it's likely about 93% will again tick the box 'I never stopped beating my wife' unless something happens to change the answer they will give. The conclusions you may draw from how you look at the figure, such as how many people are still beating their wife, would be up to you, notwithstanding the fact that the particular setup you've chosen might reasonably allow a statistician to assume that in a census following six months later some of those who had answered 'Last year or sooner' might move into the 'last year or greater' category.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    93% of people ticked a box to state their religion, but they were never asked if they were religious, therefore, what is being measured is anything from cultural identity, to adopted faith, to the beliefs of the parents or whoever completes the form etc
    I don't think so. What is being is measured is what religion people say they are. Whether they are religious, or what their cultural identity, or adopted faith is, or what their parent beliefs are, is not asked, so any assumptions about that are simply assumptions, not measurements. As you say, they were never asked if they were religious, so why are you trying to match the results against what you think is evidence of being religious?
    Akrasia wrote: »
    You have taken the 93% result from the last census to justify the current question which is used to assume that 93% of people have a religion, when it's obvious to anyone that there are more than 7% of people in Ireland who are not religious. 18% of people in Ireland attend mass regularly but 84% of people said they were Roman catholic. The circle does not fit in the square hole.
    Whether or not people are religious is not being questioned; I have said the 93% of the last census justifies the supposition that most people will say they have a religion, because they did before. Your circle isn't fitting your square because you're deliberately confusing circles and squares; see above.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    The census question is clearly giving misleading results.
    No; the results are straightforward. You're clearly trying to mislead by conflating whether people have a religion with whether people are religious.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,676 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    Absolam wrote: »
    How exactly is it defeating my own argument? There's certainly an opinion being offered about how valid people think both the question and answers are; but whether or not people think they're trustworthy has no bearing on their consistency.
    I love this. You're defending the question, even though it provides inaccurate and useless information on the basis that consistently wrong is better than a question that would provide better information but is not directly comparable to previous census results.

    Maybe the census should still ask us about whether we are "deaf, dumb, blind, idiot, imbecile or lunatic" just so we can easily compare todays population with the ireland of the 1901
    You can assume that the next time you ask the question, it's likely about 93% will again tick the box 'I never stopped beating my wife' unless something happens to change the answer they will give. The conclusions you may draw from how you look at the figure, such as how many people are still beating their wife, would be up to you, notwithstanding the fact that the particular setup you've chosen might reasonably allow a statistician to assume that in a census following six months later some of those who had answered 'Last year or sooner' might move into the 'last year or greater' category.
    You would know that some people admit being reformed wife beaters, you know nothing else about the population. It's a terrible question because you are left with more questions than answers.
    I don't think so. What is being is measured is what religion people say they are. Whether they are religious, or what their cultural identity, or adopted faith is, or what their parent beliefs are, is not asked, so any assumptions about that are simply assumptions, not measurements. As you say, they were never asked if they were religious, so why are you trying to match the results against what you think is evidence of being religious?
    You're wrong. There is no agreement on what the question is asking, there are no notes to clarify if it means cultural identity, heritage or current belief. Because nobody knows what is actually been asked, the information collected is tainted and unreliable.
    Whether or not people are religious is not being questioned; I have said the 93% of the last census justifies the supposition that most people will say they have a religion,
    You're arguing that people can have a religion but are not religious? It's as clear as mud, and you're tripping over yourself trying to justify a question that artificially inflates religious belief in Ireland because it suits you to believe that religion is not in terminal decline in modern Ireland. (it would be nice to have official statistics to back up that statement, but the census figures are wrong)

    I care about this question because I want the state to become more secular to reflect the secular attitudes of the population, religious people want to leave the question as it is because they want to protect the church state relationship, the religious schools and hospitals and the privileged position that religious leaders have in influencing policy and legislation.

    We both have an agenda, but the difference between us, is that I want more accurate information to be recorded, while you want to maintain an illusion of religiosity in the national statistics.

    No; the results are straightforward. You're clearly trying to mislead by conflating whether people have a religion with whether people are religious.

    Define 'having a religion' and how is it different from being religious. And after you're finished defining 'having a religion' demonstrate that this is an official or universally accepted definition such that it would not cause confusion when interpreting the census data


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,788 ✭✭✭MrPudding


    Why not keep the current questions, so we can continue to track the numbers of people answering it incorrectly and keep Absolam happy, but add another question relating to practice?

    Something like: "If your religion holds regular services or ceremonies do you attend those services or ceremonies?

    - Yes
    - No

    If you answered yes to the previous question how frequently do you attend those services or ceremonies?

    - Only for special ceremonies (births, deaths weddings etc.)
    - 1 time per year
    - > 1 but < 5 times per year
    - Monthly
    - Weekly
    - Daily"

    Clearly it would need a bit of work...

    MrP


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 21,730 ✭✭✭✭Fred Swanson


    This post has been deleted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,586 ✭✭✭Canadel


    The worst question on the form is "Can you speak Irish - Yes or No" imo.

    You just know half the country is going to put yes because they can ask can they go to the jacks. The question should be "Can you speak fluent Irish" or simply "Do you speak Irish everyday". The funding that language gets is a joke. And a massive waste of resources.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,770 ✭✭✭The Randy Riverbeast


    Canadel wrote: »
    The worst question on the form is "Can you speak Irish - Yes or No" imo.

    You just know half the country is going to put yes because they can ask can they go to the jacks. The question should be "Can you speak fluent Irish" or simply "Do you speak Irish everyday". The funding that language gets is a joke. And a massive waste of resources.

    They ask if you speak it weekly, daily, never etc

    I think it is about 1.7 million who claim to speak Irish.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,586 ✭✭✭Canadel


    They ask if you speak it weekly, daily, never etc
    That's the follow up question.
    I think it is about 1.7 million who claim to speak Irish.
    Exactly my point. Ridiculous claim.

    I doubt there are 170,000 who can speak Irish fluently or even to conversational level.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Akrasia wrote: »
    I love this. You're defending the question, even though it provides inaccurate and useless information on the basis that consistently wrong is better than a question that would provide better information but is not directly comparable to previous census results.
    Maybe the census should still ask us about whether we are "deaf, dumb, blind, idiot, imbecile or lunatic" just so we can easily compare todays population with the ireland of the 1901
    I think your notion of 'defending the question', is pretty odd; it's just a question, it doesn't need defending. I'm saying that contrary to Choochtowns ideas, I can see a logical structure in how it's set out, and with regard to amending it, why statistical consistency in the series would be a reason not to. I think your argument for inaccuracy in the result is based on an inaccuracy in your assessment; trying to use data on what religion people say they are to determine if they are religious is trying to shoehorn one thing into another, very much your previous round pegs and square holes problem. Whether or not it is useless depends on what the CSO uses it for (I'll agree it's useless for in some nebulous fashion persuading the state to become more secular to reflect the secular attitudes of the population, though I'm not convinced of what would be useful for that, nor yet that it's something the CSO would do anyway); you haven't told use why any other question would be more useful to the CSO, you've only put forward ideas for questions which would produce useful results for anti-theists. The Anti Theist Office doesn't operate a census though.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    You would know that some people admit being reformed wife beaters, you know nothing else about the population. It's a terrible question because you are left with more questions than answers.
    In fairness you've only yourself to blame for that; you made up the question and the answers. Based on your own assessment there's good reason to keep you well away from rewriting census questions!
    Akrasia wrote: »
    You're wrong. There is no agreement on what the question is asking, there are no notes to clarify if it means cultural identity, heritage or current belief. Because nobody knows what is actually been asked, the information collected is tainted and unreliable.
    I'm not. There's no disagreement on what the question is asking. "What is your religion?". There's no room for dispute there; the question asks what is your religion. What you think that entails is something else, obviously, and since you don't think it will produce a result you like, you think it's tainted and unreliable. But for the purposes of understanding what religion people say they are, the information collected is perfectly fine.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    You're arguing that people can have a religion but are not religious? It's as clear as mud, and you're tripping over yourself trying to justify a question that artificially inflates religious belief in Ireland because it suits you to believe that religion is not in terminal decline in modern Ireland. (it would be nice to have official statistics to back up that statement, but the census figures are wrong)
    I'm saying there's no reason to think someone can't say they have a religion yet not think they are religious. Again, I'm still not trying to justify the question; I'm pointing out that you're trying to shoehorn unstated information into it. I understand that you'd like information that agrees with your perception and you want to work back to a question that will give it to you, but a census is not the place for that sort of thinking. Just like your perception that it suits me to believe that religion is not in terminal decline in modern Ireland, so you create arguments around it. In fact I've never said any such thing, nor have I tried to justify a question that artificially inflates religious belief in Ireland; I've pointed out the question measures what religion people say they are, nothing more. As religions ebb and flow in Ireland, the current census will measure how many people say they belong to each, and how many say they belong to none. I've no problem with the fact that that is what is measured.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    I care about this question because I want the state to become more secular to reflect the secular attitudes of the population, religious people want to leave the question as it is because they want to protect the church state relationship, the religious schools and hospitals and the privileged position that religious leaders have in influencing policy and legislation.
    Maybe let the religious people offer their own arguments for what they want? However, with regards to what you want, I'd suggest the census simply isn't a means to your end. That'd you'd like it to be doesn't seem to be a really good reason to change it.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    We both have an agenda, but the difference between us, is that I want more accurate information to be recorded, while you want to maintain an illusion of religiosity in the national statistics.
    It's humbling that you can perceive my agenda and set if forth for me without ever even making an enquiry; your psychic skills obviously surpass your ability to create census questions. Though on the other hand, since that's not my agenda, maybe not. But I would suggest that your own agenda is also set out incorrectly; from what you've said it's not more accurate information you're looking to get (or at least you've suggested no means to disarm the interfering numerators, misled dads, bossy mammies, scary flatmates, & no doorbells), but different information; a means of measuring the religiousity of those who are so inconsiderate of your agenda that they say they have a religion.
    Personally, I feel the question as stands provides statistical consistency in the series, which is a good reason to retain the format. I wouldn't object to changing it if statistical consistency could be maintained (ie it still measured the same metric), or adding additional questions regarding religion if the CSO had an objective use for the additional information obtained. I'm not inclined to think serving your agenda is an objective use, or even a worthwile use of the CSOs resources though.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    Define 'having a religion' and how is it different from being religious. And after you're finished defining 'having a religion' demonstrate that this is an official or universally accepted definition such that it would not cause confusion when interpreting the census data
    Why? I'm more than happy to stipulate that your idea of having a religion may be different to someone else's, and whilst you seem to think that having a religion in some way necessitates being religious, others may well feel differently. Since we're not setting out to determine how religious people are, or what they think having a religion entails, neither would seem to matter to the question "What religion are you?". The only thing that matters is what religion they say they are....


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,247 ✭✭✭pauldla


    Canadel wrote: »
    That's the follow up question.


    Exactly my point. Ridiculous claim.

    I doubt there are 170,000 who can speak Irish fluently or even to conversational level.

    'Do you have Duolingo on your phone? If so, do you use it to review your primary school Irish daily/weekly/monthly/in the run up to Paddy's Day?'

    (My answer would be monthly. Cad a deir an sionnach?)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Cheers for that, just downloaded it! Always hated Irish in school and ever since I left I always wished I'd learned to speak it properly. Now I can remind myself every day how little I know :D


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,247 ✭✭✭pauldla


    Absolam wrote: »
    Cheers for that, just downloaded it! Always hated Irish in school and ever since I left I always wished I'd learned to speak it properly. Now I can remind myself every day how little I know :D

    Taw failcha rowat :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,676 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    Absolam wrote: »
    I think your notion of 'defending the question', is pretty odd; it's just a question, it doesn't need defending. I'm saying that contrary to Choochtowns ideas, I can see a logical structure in how it's set out, and with regard to amending it, why statistical consistency in the series would be a reason not to. I think your argument for inaccuracy in the result is based on an inaccuracy in your assessment; trying to use data on what religion people say they are to determine if they are religious is trying to shoehorn one thing into another, very much your previous round pegs and square holes problem. Whether or not it is useless depends on what the CSO uses it for (I'll agree it's useless for in some nebulous fashion persuading the state to become more secular to reflect the secular attitudes of the population, though I'm not convinced of what would be useful for that, nor yet that it's something the CSO would do anyway); you haven't told use why any other question would be more useful to the CSO, you've only put forward ideas for questions which would produce useful results for anti-theists. The Anti Theist Office doesn't operate a census though.

    The consistency argument doesn't hold up because questions in the census evolve over time. 50 years ago, when the number of outspoken atheists in the country could be counted on the fingers of one hand. And the main social dynamic was catholic vs protestant 'what religion are you' was a useful question. Now, the catholics and protestants have joined forces and the dynamic is secular versus religious, so 'what is your religion' is no longer a useful question when it presumes that everyone is religious.
    In fairness you've only yourself to blame for that; you made up the question and the answers. Based on your own assessment there's good reason to keep you well away from rewriting census questions!
    It was deliberately written that way to demonstrate how poorly written questions can have useless answers.

    I thought that would have been obvious
    I'm not. There's no disagreement on what the question is asking. "What is your religion?". There's no room for dispute there; the question asks what is your religion. What you think that entails is something else, obviously, and since you don't think it will produce a result you like, you think it's tainted and unreliable. But for the purposes of understanding what religion people say they are, the information collected is perfectly fine.
    There's no room for dispute? Is there room for reality in this discussion, this thread disproves that statement. You're arguing with people about the meaning of this question and in the middle of this long protracted argument, you say that there is no room for dispute about the central disagreement that people are clearly disputing?

    What is your religion is clearly a leading question that confuses people who are not religious. The answer for a religious person is obvious, the answer for a non practising/believing person is less obvious, do they tick the religion they were born into, or do they make the conscious effort to become an apostate and abandon their heritage and cultural identity.

    If you ask people 'are you religious' loads of people will say no. If you ask people what religion are you, the same people who said no, will often answer 'catholic' or whatever. So the format of the question definitely matters.
    I'm saying there's no reason to think someone can't say they have a religion yet not think they are religious. Again, I'm still not trying to justify the question; I'm pointing out that you're trying to shoehorn unstated information into it. I understand that you'd like information that agrees with your perception and you want to work back to a question that will give it to you, but a census is not the place for that sort of thinking. Just like your perception that it suits me to believe that religion is not in terminal decline in modern Ireland, so you create arguments around it. In fact I've never said any such thing, nor have I tried to justify a question that artificially inflates religious belief in Ireland; I've pointed out the question measures what religion people say they are, nothing more. As religions ebb and flow in Ireland, the current census will measure how many people say they belong to each, and how many say they belong to none. I've no problem with the fact that that is what is measured.

    I'm trying to shoehorn unstated information?
    Me?

    All I'm doing is pointing out that the question is flawed. I'm saying that people shouldn't take any information out of that question because it's poorly formed. The only information you can take out of the question, is, as you've said yourself, the answer people gave to the question.

    It's as informative as asking people
    'Pick a number between 1 and 10' We'll get an answer, but it's not a useful answer.

    If you're trying to measure the 'ebb and flow' of religion, you should ask people if they're religious, not just what religion they were born into.
    Maybe let the religious people offer their own arguments for what they want? However, with regards to what you want, I'd suggest the census simply isn't a means to your end. That'd you'd like it to be doesn't seem to be a really good reason to change it.
    I'm being honest about my agenda, religious people, including you, are being dishonest by pretending that they have no agenda. My agenda is that the census should reflect the true status of religion in Ireland. You don't get to win the debate by lying about your motivations or avoiding the question. I can point out that everyone has a bias, and if you think I am wrong, then deny it and we can discuss that.

    It's humbling that you can perceive my agenda and set if forth for me without ever even making an enquiry; your psychic skills obviously surpass your ability to create census questions. Though on the other hand, since that's not my agenda, maybe not.
    state your agenda then.
    But I would suggest that your own agenda is also set out incorrectly; from what you've said it's not more accurate information you're looking to get (or at least you've suggested no means to disarm the interfering numerators, misled dads, bossy mammies, scary flatmates, & no doorbells), but different information; a means of measuring the religiousity of those who are so inconsiderate of your agenda that they say they have a religion.
    I just want a question that gives accurate information about what people believe. You don't.
    Personally, I feel the question as stands provides statistical consistency in the series, which is a good reason to retain the format.
    Is it a good enough reason to overcome the flaws in the format? Is consistency more important than accuracy?

    What is the use of consistently misleading information? Should people have to guess about what people really meant when they answered a question, or should the question be asked in an un ambiguous manner?

    I wouldn't object to changing it if statistical consistency could be maintained (ie it still measured the same metric), or adding additional questions regarding religion if the CSO had an objective use for the additional information obtained. I'm not inclined to think serving your agenda is an objective use, or even a worthwile use of the CSOs resources though.
    Any change to the questions on the census will impact 'consistency' I don't care if they ask additional questions or change the current question. I want a distinction between belief and heritage to be recorded in the census because that is important information for the development of policy and legislation.
    Why? I'm more than happy to stipulate that your idea of having a religion may be different to someone else's, and whilst you seem to think that having a religion in some way necessitates being religious, others may well feel differently. Since we're not setting out to determine how religious people are, or what they think having a religion entails, neither would seem to matter to the question "What religion are you?". The only thing that matters is what religion they say they are....
    Why?
    When you make assertions, like:

    "the results are straightforward. You're clearly trying to mislead by conflating whether people have a religion with whether people are religious"

    You should be able to support those assertions with evidence or argument.

    If you can't support your assertion that there is an easily understood difference between people having a religion, and people being religious, then you should withdraw that claim.

    The results are not straightforward. There is no clear difference between having a religion and being religious. Asking people 'what is your religion' and getting a 93% response indicating a religion clearly implies that 93% of people are religious, and that's in total disagreement with all the other evidence that shows way more than 7% of people are not religious


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Akrasia wrote: »
    The consistency argument doesn't hold up because questions in the census evolve over time. 50 years ago, when the number of outspoken atheists in the country could be counted on the fingers of one hand. And the main social dynamic was catholic vs protestant 'what religion are you' was a useful question. Now, the catholics and protestants have joined forces and the dynamic is secular versus religious, so 'what is your religion' is no longer a useful question when it presumes that everyone is religious.
    No, it holds up for any question for as long as that question doesn't change. That's statistics for you. Whether or not it's a 'useful' question is obviously an entirely different thing; I understand that the questions you favour is one you think would be useful to you, though I'm not sure it's any more useful than the existing one to the CSO. That fact that the question presumes everyone has a religion (not is religious, as you've said) has nothing to do with how 'useful' it is, but the presumption is borne out by the fact that 93% of respondents said they had a religion all the same.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    It was deliberately written that way to demonstrate how poorly written questions can have useless answers. I thought that would have been obvious
    Well done you so.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    There's no room for dispute? Is there room for reality in this discussion, this thread disproves that statement. You're arguing with people about the meaning of this question and in the middle of this long protracted argument, you say that there is no room for dispute about the central disagreement that people are clearly disputing?
    Actually I said there's disagreement on what the question is asking. It's straightforward: "What is your religion?" It means what is your religion. You may want it to mean something else, you may draw conclusions regarding anything from cultural identity, to adopted faith, to the beliefs of the parents or whoever completes the form etc, but it's only four words. What is your religion. It means nothing other than what it says.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    What is your religion is clearly a leading question that confuses people who are not religious. The answer for a religious person is obvious, the answer for a non practising/believing person is less obvious, do they tick the religion they were born into, or do they make the conscious effort to become an apostate and abandon their heritage and cultural identity.
    I think there aren't all that many people who aren't religious (or even who don't have a religion) who get so confused by the question what is your religion that they feel compelled to say they have one. And those that do exist probably have much bigger issues than a census form.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    If you ask people 'are you religious' loads of people will say no. If you ask people what religion are you, the same people who said no, will often answer 'catholic' or whatever. So the format of the question definitely matters.
    So what you're saying is, ask people two different questions, get two different answers. I think I may have pointed that very thing out earlier on.....
    Akrasia wrote: »
    I'm trying to shoehorn unstated information?
    Me? All I'm doing is pointing out that the question is flawed. I'm saying that people shouldn't take any information out of that question because it's poorly formed. The only information you can take out of the question, is, as you've said yourself, the answer people gave to the question.
    Well done. Aside from thinking the question is flawed because you can't derive information from it that isn't put into it you've arrived at where you should have started; the question tells us what religion people say they are and nothing else. Specifically for the purposes of the argument you're advancing, it doesn't tell us if they're religious, or how religious they are, because they're not asked.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    It's as informative as asking people
    'Pick a number between 1 and 10' We'll get an answer, but it's not a useful answer.
    That's a pretty useful question if you want to know what numbers people will pick when asked to pick a number between 1 and 10 though. In fact, it's the perfect question, especially if you ask everyone.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    If you're trying to measure the 'ebb and flow' of religion, you should ask people if they're religious, not just what religion they were born into.
    Then you'd be measuring the ebb and flow of religiousness. And they weren't asked what religion they were born into, remember? It was a real simple four words; What religion are you?. Nothing about born at all; that's you shoehorning again. So, like I said, the current census will measure how many people say they belong to each, and how many say they belong to none.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    I'm being honest about my agenda, religious people, including you, are being dishonest by pretending that they have no agenda. My agenda is that the census should reflect the true status of religion in Ireland. You don't get to win the debate by lying about your motivations or avoiding the question. I can point out that everyone has a bias, and if you think I am wrong, then deny it and we can discuss that.
    So, it's up to you to decide I'm religious, and what my agenda is, and whether I'm honest about it? Don't think so, sorry. Accusing someone of lying just because they're not providing the argument you want is pretty low....
    Akrasia wrote: »
    state your agenda then.
    Why do I have to have an agenda? I'd rather do without to be honest, I've been fine up to now without one.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    I just want a question that gives accurate information about what people believe. You don't.
    You really need to get over this telling people what they think thing, it's not good for you. I'm happy to have a question that provides information about how people identify themselves that can be measured over time to give an idea how the population is changing. I don't really care to know what they believe; I don't think anything so nebulous can reasonably be captured in a census, I think it probably changes on a day to day basis, and I can't see a lot of use for it.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    Is it a good enough reason to overcome the flaws in the format? Is consistency more important than accuracy? What is the use of consistently misleading information? Should people have to guess about what people really meant when they answered a question, or should the question be asked in an un ambiguous manner?
    I don't think there's anything inaccurate or misleading about the current information; I know it's not the information you'd like to have, and using it as if it is would lead to you being accused of being misleading, or even having to guess at what you really think would better serve your purpose, but that's not the fault of the census.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    Any change to the questions on the census will impact 'consistency' I don't care if they ask additional questions or change the current question. I want a distinction between belief and heritage to be recorded in the census because that is important information for the development of policy and legislation.
    I don't think I like the sound of developing policy or legislation based on beliefs or heritage thanks, so I think I'll pass on your suggestion. Sounds a bit too much like social engineering.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    Why? When you make assertions, like:
    "the results are straightforward. You're clearly trying to mislead by conflating whether people have a religion with whether people are religious"
    You should be able to support those assertions with evidence or argument.
    If you can't support your assertion that there is an easily understood difference between people having a religion, and people being religious, then you should withdraw that claim.
    Oh, I don't think I need to define 'having a religion' and how is it different from being religious to make that assertion; you have on this thread conflated being religious with having a religion (over and over and over again), without ever telling us why they should be treated as the same thing.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    The results are not straightforward. There is no clear difference between having a religion and being religious. Asking people 'what is your religion' and getting a 93% response indicating a religion clearly implies that 93% of people are religious, and that's in total disagreement with all the other evidence that shows way more than 7% of people are not religious
    And yet according to Choochtown 53% of the population claim not to be a religious person, so it would seem that your understanding of what it is to be religious is at odds with a very large proportion of the population.
    So either, being religious is not the same as having a religion, or most of the population are very confused. I'm afraid most of the people I meet don't usually strike me as very confused, so I'm inclined to think it's just you, and it is possible to have a religion yet not consider yourself religious. And I've yet to see any reason to measure how religious people actually are, never mind how religious they may say they are.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,676 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    Absolam wrote: »
    No, it holds up for any question for as long as that question doesn't change. That's statistics for you. Whether or not it's a 'useful' question is obviously an entirely different thing; I understand that the questions you favour is one you think would be useful to you, though I'm not sure it's any more useful than the existing one to the CSO. That fact that the question presumes everyone has a religion (not is religious, as you've said) has nothing to do with how 'useful' it is, but the presumption is borne out by the fact that 93% of respondents said they had a religion all the same.

    Well done you so.

    Actually I said there's disagreement on what the question is asking. It's straightforward: "What is your religion?" It means what is your religion. You may want it to mean something else, you may draw conclusions regarding anything from cultural identity, to adopted faith, to the beliefs of the parents or whoever completes the form etc, but it's only four words. What is your religion. It means nothing other than what it says.
    I think there aren't all that many people who aren't religious (or even who don't have a religion) who get so confused by the question what is your religion that they feel compelled to say they have one. And those that do exist probably have much bigger issues than a census form.
    So what you're saying is, ask people two different questions, get two different answers. I think I may have pointed that very thing out earlier on.....
    Well done. Aside from thinking the question is flawed because you can't derive information from it that isn't put into it you've arrived at where you should have started; the question tells us what religion people say they are and nothing else. Specifically for the purposes of the argument you're advancing, it doesn't tell us if they're religious, or how religious they are, because they're not asked.
    That's a pretty useful question if you want to know what numbers people will pick when asked to pick a number between 1 and 10 though. In fact, it's the perfect question, especially if you ask everyone.
    Then you'd be measuring the ebb and flow of religiousness. And they weren't asked what religion they were born into, remember? It was a real simple four words; What religion are you?. Nothing about born at all; that's you shoehorning again. So, like I said, the current census will measure how many people say they belong to each, and how many say they belong to none.
    So, it's up to you to decide I'm religious, and what my agenda is, and whether I'm honest about it? Don't think so, sorry. Accusing someone of lying just because they're not providing the argument you want is pretty low....
    Why do I have to have an agenda? I'd rather do without to be honest, I've been fine up to now without one.
    You really need to get over this telling people what they think thing, it's not good for you. I'm happy to have a question that provides information about how people identify themselves that can be measured over time to give an idea how the population is changing. I don't really care to know what they believe; I don't think anything so nebulous can reasonably be captured in a census, I think it probably changes on a day to day basis, and I can't see a lot of use for it.
    I don't think there's anything inaccurate or misleading about the current information; I know it's not the information you'd like to have, and using it as if it is would lead to you being accused of being misleading, or even having to guess at what you really think would better serve your purpose, but that's not the fault of the census.
    I don't think I like the sound of developing policy or legislation based on beliefs or heritage thanks, so I think I'll pass on your suggestion. Sounds a bit too much like social engineering.

    Oh, I don't think I need to define 'having a religion' and how is it different from being religious to make that assertion; you have on this thread conflated being religious with having a religion (over and over and over again), without ever telling us why they should be treated as the same thing.
    And yet according to Choochtown 53% of the population claim not to be a religious person, so it would seem that your understanding of what it is to be religious is at odds with a very large proportion of the population.
    So either, being religious is not the same as having a religion, or most of the population are very confused. I'm afraid most of the people I meet don't usually strike me as very confused, so I'm inclined to think it's just you, and it is possible to have a religion yet not consider yourself religious. And I've yet to see any reason to measure how religious people actually are, never mind how religious they may say they are.

    It's boring to talk to someone who refuses to provide any arguments to support his/her own position

    You insist that there is a clear difference between being religious and 'having a religion' but you refuse to define that difference

    I keep hammering this point not because i think there is no difference, but because it is confusing and there are multiple interpretations of what it means to 'have a religion'. My position is perfectly reasonable. The census shouldn't ask 'What religion are you' because it's a leading question by every single definition of leading questions. It's clearly and obviously the wrong way to phrase that question without first asking people if they are religious.

    If you ask two people who are functionally atheist "What religion are you" and one of them thinks the question means what religion do you practise, and the other person thinks the question means 'what religion were you baptised into before you could crawl' you're going to get two different answers to the same question based on two equally valid interpretations of the same question

    That's why it needs to be changed. The two answers are opposite to each other, but are equally valid depending on how each person interprets the question, and without any guidance or notes on what the question means, the two different interpretations are equally valid.

    The only argument for keeping the question the same is 'consistency' and it's a stupid argument.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Akrasia wrote: »
    It's boring to talk to someone who refuses to provide any arguments to support his/her own position
    Well, my position is this idea of a need to change the census so that it delivers a statistic you want makes no sense for everyone else; I think I've provided one or two arguments in that regard.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    You insist that there is a clear difference between being religious and 'having a religion' but you refuse to define that difference
    In fairness you're the one trying to say they're the same, despite all the evidence that most people in the country don't seem to agree with you. Still if it helps you get over it I would say;
    Having a religion is when you say " I am x religion"
    Being religious is when you indulge in the various observances of a particular religion, or perhaps simply when you say "I am religious", because you feel you are.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    I keep hammering this point because not because i think there is no difference, but because it is confusing and there are multiple interpretations of what it means to 'have a religion'. My position is perfectly reasonable. The census shouldn't ask 'What religion are you' because it's a leading question by every single definition of leading questions. It's clearly and obviously the wrong way to phrase that question without first asking people if they are religious.
    Sure, you can create just about as many interpretations as you like of what it means to have a religion. You could if you wanted fill a whole census book with them, and still find someone has another you didn't think of. For the purposes of the current census though, it doesn't matter, because it doesn't set out to measure how people interpret what it means to have a religion. It only measures what religion they say they have.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    If you ask two people who are functionally atheist "What religion are you" and one of them thinks the question means what religion do you practise, and the other person thinks the question means 'what religion were you baptised into before you could crawl' you're going to get two different answers to the same question based on two equally valid interpretations of the same question.
    Sure. And that's not a problem, because they will still have answered the question.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    That's why it needs to be changed. The two answers are opposite to each other, but are equally valid depending on how each person interprets the question, and without any guidance or notes on what the question means, the two different interpretations are equally valid.
    That's not a reason to change the question, it's a reason to accept the answer; they're both perfectly valid, simply because they are answers.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    The only argument for keeping the question the same is 'consistency' and it's a stupid argument.
    Ah well, if it's stupid we should just change it then. And if we change it for one you think will give you what you want that'll just be a happy accident, eh?


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,472 ✭✭✭Choochtown


    Absolam wrote: »

    Well, I can see you think the Gallup poll is comparable, but you haven't given us a link to it so it's hard to say.

    For the 2nd time here's the link: http://www.wingia.com/web/files/news/14/file/14.pdf

    "Irrespective of whether you attend a place of worship or not, would you say you are a religious person, not a religious person or a convinced atheist?"

    A very fair and balanced question in my opinion. In Ireland only 43% said that they were a religious person.

    This figure is so far from the results given by our 2011 Census as to render one or both polls useless. Personally I think the Gallup question is a much much more straightforward one. It doesn't presume any answers unlike the one in our census and it also leaves the onus on the individual to decide "irrespective of... "

    Absolam you seem to think that inaccurate answers are
    "perfectly valid, simply because they are answers."

    I disagree. The purpose of the CSO is not to collect inaccuracies, otherwise why would they bother with explanatory notes at the back of the Census?

    In their words the information gathered is "quality statistical information, which is vital for the formation, implementation and monitoring of policy and programmes at national, regional and local levels in a rapidly changing economic and social environment."

    It simply is not good enough to have a flawed, ambiguous, misleading, unexplained question in the census that is clearly (as I've pointed out before) set out differently from all the other questions. Particularly given that:
    1. the previous results for this exact same question have given such disputable results. and
    2. these results help to decide government policy.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 505 ✭✭✭inocybe


    Canadel wrote: »
    The worst question on the form is "Can you speak Irish - Yes or No" imo.

    You just know half the country is going to put yes because they can ask can they go to the jacks. The question should be "Can you speak fluent Irish" or simply "Do you speak Irish everyday". The funding that language gets is a joke. And a massive waste of resources.

    I'm really stuck on how to answer that one. I did Irish at school, but any sentence I could attempt would be grammatically disastrous, and I doubt I would understand anything a native speaker said. I might as well put down that I speak Spanish thanks to Sesame Street.
    On the other hand I think I should tick yes, just so I can put that I never speak it.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,770 ✭✭✭The Randy Riverbeast


    Canadel wrote: »
    That's the follow up question.


    Exactly my point. Ridiculous claim.

    I doubt there are 170,000 who can speak Irish fluently or even to conversational level.

    At least it still tries to clarify how often the language is used. Everyone in the country could speak a language but if nobody actually uses it then it's not much good.

    In 100 years time someone may be wondering what happened to me when I lost the ability to speak Irish in 2011. Think there was something in about 1911 that made people suddenly become illiterate as there was money given to them.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,676 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    The cso have released a smartphone app that clarifies how we should answer the questions.

    Regarding the religion question, they state that the respondents should answer based on their current beliefs and not the religion that They may have been brought up with.

    Now that their intention is clear it's even more obvious that the question is badly worded and the information gathered is inaccurate


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Choochtown wrote: »
    For the 2nd time here's the link: http://www.wingia.com/web/files/news/14/file/14.pdf
    Ah... and now I see where you posted it the first time, I also see that you pointed out that the Gallup poll did contain a different question, one which you felt was a much much more straightforward one. So we can immediately see why one would generate a result that says 93% of people have a religion, and the other would generate a result showing 53% are not religious; they're different questions with different answers.
    Choochtown wrote: »
    This figure is so far from the results given by our 2011 Census as to render one or both polls useless. Personally I think the Gallup question is a much much more straightforward one. It doesn't presume any answers unlike the one in our census and it also leaves the onus on the individual to decide "irrespective of... "
    I disagree. Each question is different, and has a different result. In fact having both allows us to see that the population clearly doesn't conflate having a religion with being religious; a piece of information we wouldn't have if we didn't have both surveys.
    Choochtown wrote: »
    Absolam you seem to think that inaccurate answers are "perfectly valid, simply because they are answers. I disagree. The purpose of the CSO is not to collect inaccuracies, otherwise why would they bother with explanatory notes at the back of the Census?"
    No, I just think disagreeing with a question, or answer, doesn't make it inaccurate. If you can demonstrate that the 93% who said they are a religion aren't a religion (as distinct from being religious) then we may say the result is inaccurate. Until then, there's no reason to think it is (other than the vagaries of interfering numerators, misled dads, bossy mammies, scary flatmates, no doorbells, and the fact that most catholics just aren't the proper kind of Catholics, obviously) inaccurate.
    Choochtown wrote: »
    In their words the information gathered is "quality statistical information, which is vital for the formation, implementation and monitoring of policy and programmes at national, regional and local levels in a rapidly changing economic and social environment." It simply is not good enough to have a flawed, ambiguous, misleading, unexplained question in the census that is clearly (as I've pointed out before) set out differently from all the other questions. Particularly given that: 1. the previous results for this exact same question have given such disputable results. and
    2. these results help to decide government policy.
    Well, you haven't shown it is flawed, or ambiguous, or misleading, or unexplained ( 2 out of 3 ain't bad, as Meatloaf says), and as I pointed out before, they seem to be set out consistently with the potential logic to all the other questions. Sure, certain people want to dispute the results, but it's generally on the basis of how religious they perceive people to be rather than on the basis of what religion people say they are, isn't it?

    And as long as the government policy they're used to decide revolves around what religion people are, rather than how religious they are, the answers are perfectly adequate.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Akrasia wrote: »
    The cso have released a smartphone app that clarifies how we should answer the questions.
    Regarding the religion question, they state that the respondents should answer based on their current beliefs and not the religion that They may have been brought up with.
    Now that their intention is clear it's even more obvious that the question is badly worded and the information gathered is inaccurate
    So the app repeats the information that was already on the website, which we were all discussing on the thread? Just as well their intention is clear now, eh? I mean if people had that explanation available to them last October they could have started spreading the word...

    Still, one less reason to complain about all those silly people who didn't understand the question and just picked Catholic inaccurately I suppose.
    As a matter of interest, does the app say anything about the question being badly worded or the information gathered being inaccurate? I bet it doesn't...


    That's three out of four now, Choochtown :)


  • Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators, Regional South East Moderators Posts: 28,522 Mod ✭✭✭✭Cabaal


    Akrasia wrote: »
    The cso have released a smartphone app that clarifies how we should answer the questions.

    Doesn't really resolve the issue though, many people in the country don't want/have smart phones and the rest likely won't ever hear of the smart phone app.

    The question was badly planned from the start and I can't see it changing as certain interest groups would be very fearful of the results and implications of such results when it comes to government policy's, planning and especially educational. It gets much much harder to justify the current school system if 50 or 60% marked catholic.
    Absolam wrote: »
    So the app repeats the information that was already on the website,

    Its on a website, big wow.
    It should be on the document itself, thats the most important part of the census and where the vast majority will obtain information on how to complete it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Cabaal wrote: »
    Its on a website, big wow.
    It should be on the document itself, thats the most important part of the census and where the vast majority will obtain information on how to complete it.
    In fairness, if the same explanation was on the form as is on the app and on the website, and 93% of respondents said they had a religion, would you accept the figure as accurate? I have a feeling you wouldn't :D


  • Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators, Regional South East Moderators Posts: 28,522 Mod ✭✭✭✭Cabaal


    Absolam wrote: »
    In fairness, if the same explanation was on the form as is on the app and on the website, and 93% of respondents said they had a religion, would you accept the figure as accurate? I have a feeling you wouldn't :D

    Having a "religion" and being of the catholic faith specifically are very different things, if people simply want to believe in a god then by all means I have no problem with this.

    Also not sure where you are pulling the 93% number from, seems pretty baseless and made up.

    But right now many people tick catholic blindly even though they don't believe in many catholic beliefs and would laugh or be disgusted at many of them if you explained them to them and said they needed to believe in them.

    At the end of the day the current question format provides inaccurate data, just like the Irish language question does.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,676 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    Absolam wrote: »
    In fairness, if the same explanation was on the form as is on the app and on the website, and 93% of respondents said they had a religion, would you accept the figure as accurate? I have a feeling you wouldn't :D

    93% of people wouldn't answer that they 'have a religion' if the census form had that information on it.

    A subsection of people would read the notes. Many more people wouldn't bother and would just tick the box based on their own interpretation of the question. Some would write 'atheist', agnostic, pastafarian or 'jedi knight' in the box

    If the intention of the CSO is to measure religious belief in the population, they should write the question as something like
    1. Are you religious
    1a If yes, what religion are you

    That is the way to gather the information that they say they want.

    Not the information you think I want, but the information the CSO wants by asking this question. You haven't got a leg to stand on Absolam.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Cabaal wrote: »
    Having a "religion" and being of the catholic faith specifically are very different things, if people simply want to believe in a god then by all means I have no problem with this. Also not sure where you are pulling the 93% number from, seems pretty baseless and made up.
    That doesn't seem terribly relevant to what I said, but I guess you were trying to make some point?
    I pulled the 93% from the 2011 census; 92.81% of respondents stated a religion.
    Cabaal wrote: »
    But right now many people tick catholic blindly even though they don't believe in many catholic beliefs and would laugh or be disgusted at many of them if you explained them to them and said they needed to believe in them.
    Sure; people say they are Catholic and you think they shouldn't. I think we've covered that ground fairly thoroughly; at the end of the day it's just not up to you to tell people what religion they should say they are, they're allowed to decide for themselves.
    Cabaal wrote: »
    At the end of the day the current question format provides inaccurate data, just like the Irish language question does.
    Nope, it just provides data you don't like. Bit of a difference.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Akrasia wrote: »
    93% of people wouldn't answer that they 'have a religion' if the census form had that information on it.
    93% did answer that they had a religion, when asked what religion they were.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    A subsection of people would read the notes. Many more people wouldn't bother and would just tick the box based on their own interpretation of the question. Some would write 'atheist', agnostic, pastafarian or 'jedi knight' in the box
    So, really, putting information about the question into the notes is only going to reach a subsection anyway? Good to know. We should probably put it in other places too then, like websites and apps and suchlike.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    If the intention of the CSO is to measure religious belief in the population, they should write the question as something like
    1. Are you religious
    1a If yes, what religion are you
    They could, but they can get the same information by asking "What religion are you" and leaving room for respondents room to say "none". Which is what they do.... By the way, does the CSO say it's their intention to measure religious belief in the population? I thought they just said it provides information on the number of people of each religion or religious denomination.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    That is the way to gather the information that they say they want.
    That's two ways to gather the same information; one of them just does it with less questions. As to whether it's the information they say they want...
    Akrasia wrote: »
    Not the information you think I want, but the information the CSO wants by asking this question. You haven't got a leg to stand on Absolam.
    Tell you what; you show me where the CSO says what information it wants by asking this question, and I'll see if we get that information from the question, how's that?


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,472 ✭✭✭Choochtown


    Absolam wrote: »
    So we can immediately see why one would generate a result that says 93% of people have a religion, and the other would generate a result showing 53% are not religious; they're different questions with different answers.

    They may be different questions (1 is misleading and the other leaves it very open for the respondent to decide for themselves) but there's no doubting the similarity. People who "have a religion" must surely "be religious" or at least the vast majority of them. There is no way your play on words can account for such a discrepancy.

    [/QUOTE]Well, you haven't shown it is flawed, or ambiguous, or misleading, or unexplained ( 2 out of 3 ain't bad, as Meatloaf says), and as I pointed out before, they seem to be set out consistently with the potential logic to all the other questions. [/QUOTE]

    I've just revisited that link where you claim:

    [/QUOTE]"We can see then, that where a non answer has a higher % response than the highest potential % response of any of the answers, it's placed first, before potential answers to the questions. And where a non answer has lower % response rate than the highest potential % response of any of the answers, it's placed last, after potential answers to the questions.
    Is there a question where that logical structure doesn't apply?
    [/QUOTE]

    What about questions 14,19,20 and 25?

    Your theory just does not stack up unless of course the majority of Irish people have no education (not even primary school), don't go to work school or college and speak Irish daily!!

    I will repeat: question 12 is the only question on the form to

    1. Have a long list of options followed by an "other" option followed by 20 white boxes to declare the other before the final option. For all the other questions with choices (questions 7, 8, 9, 11, 27) the white boxes are at the very end.

    2. Have the 2nd most popular answer tucked away at the end.

    3. Have a key word (RELIGION) printed in block capitals!! Why?



    [/QUOTE]93% did answer that they had a religion, when asked what religion they were. [/QUOTE]

    Here's where you've hit the nail on the head! Of course if you ask someone what their religion is, they'll probably answer with the name of a religion!! It's called a "loaded question" and it's negligent of the CSO to include it in the census


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Choochtown wrote: »
    They may be different questions (1 is misleading and the other leaves it very open for the respondent to decide for themselves) but there's no doubting the similarity. People who "have a religion" must surely "be religious" or at least the vast majority of them. There is no way your play on words can account for such a discrepancy.
    Of course there's a similarity; they're both about religion, they simply approach it from different angles. And there's no evidence that 1 is misleading; just that it doesn't provide the result that some people would like it to. That those who say they are a religion and those who say they are religious amount to significantly different percentages when surveyed only demonstrates that it's not a play on words; people perceive them as different things. Trying to pretend they're the same thing and therefore one result is misleading is simply desperation.
    Choochtown wrote: »
    've just revisited that link where you claim:We can see then, that where a non answer has a higher % response than the highest potential % response of any of the answers, it's placed first, before potential answers to the questions. And where a non answer has lower % response rate than the highest potential % response of any of the answers, it's placed last, after potential answers to the questions.
    Is there a question where that logical structure doesn't apply? What about questions 14,19,20 and 25?
    Question 14 uses the binary logic you'd like to see on the religion question, which is consistent with question 15, but not with 19 or 20 (which are consistent with the religion question). As I said, 19 & 20 are consistent with the religion question; where a non answer has a higher % response than the highest potential % response of any of the answers, it's placed first, before potential answers to the questions. And where a non answer has lower % response rate than the highest potential % response of any of the answers, it's placed last, after potential answers to the questions.
    Question 25 does seem to have a logic of it's own, though it's logical nonetheless; it lists all possible educational levels from lowest to highest regardless of previous response rates.
    Choochtown wrote: »
    Your theory just does not stack up unless of course the majority of Irish people have no education (not even primary school), don't go to work school or college and speak Irish daily!!
    Well, it does seem to, though it's fair to say that Q25 on Education is a bit of an outlier, but it still seems logical. If anything, it demonstrates that a question which uses a logic particular to itself without being similar to other questions isn't necessarily misleading or inaccurate, since it's neither.
    Choochtown wrote: »
    I will repeat: question 12 is the only question on the form to
    1. Have a long list of options followed by an "other" option followed by 20 white boxes to declare the other before the final option. For all the other questions with choices (questions 7, 8, 9, 11, 27) the white boxes are at the very end.
    2. Have the 2nd most popular answer tucked away at the end.
    3. Have a key word (RELIGION) printed in block capitals!! Why?
    At the risk of repetition in answer to your repetition;
    1) Q12 is consistent with Q19 & Q20, Q7 doesn't have an option for a non answer, so isn't directly comparable, ditto Q8, Q9, Q11 and Q27.
    2) What you're calling the 2nd most popular answer is a non answer; No religion is not a religion, hence being separated from the answers, and placed after all answers because where a non answer has lower % response rate than the highest potential % response of any of the answers, it's placed last, after potential answers to the questions. Similar logic to Q19 and 20, where the non answer has has a higher % response than the highest potential % response of any of the answers, so it's placed first, before potential answers to the questions.
    3) Well, on other questions where you're asked to fill something in, the something is in block capitals. Like Q6, Q7, Q8, Q9, & Q10. Maybe that's why; because they want the answer in block capitals to make it easier to read?
    Choochtown wrote: »
    Here's where you've hit the nail on the head! Of course if you ask someone what their religion is, they'll probably answer with the name of a religion!! It's called a "loaded question" and it's negligent of the CSO to include it in the census
    However, if 93% of people have a religion, they'll answer with the name of that religion. The idea that lots of people will simply tell you they have a religion because you've asked them what it is, despite the fact that they know they don't actually have one is frankly ridiculous, sorry. Loaded question or not, respondents are not prevented or dissuaded from choosing the No Religion option. If you think a substantial proportion of the population are so witless as to be persuaded by a loaded question to claim a religious affiliation they don't actually have, placing no religious affiliation at the top of the list isn't going to better help them answer the question, at best it will move some of the witless into the non religious group, and some of them might actually be religious but are so witless they just tick the first box. That's not improving the census; it's just giving you a better chance at the result you want the census to produce, regardless of the facts.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,676 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    Absolam wrote: »

    Tell you what; you show me where the CSO says what information it wants by asking this question, and I'll see if we get that information from the question, how's that?

    From the horses mouth:

    People should answer the question based on how they feel now about their religious beliefs, if any. The question is asking about the person’s current religion or beliefs and not about the religion the person may have been brought up with.

    http://census.ie//the-census-and-you/each-question-in-detail/


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Akrasia wrote: »
    From the horses mouth:

    People should answer the question based on how they feel now about their religious beliefs, if any. The question is asking about the person’s current religion or beliefs and not about the religion the person may have been brought up with.

    http://census.ie//the-census-and-you/each-question-in-detail/
    Where in that does it say "The CSO wants"?
    Nice to see you're using information from the website by the way; some people were worried people wouldn't read it.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 3,163 ✭✭✭Shrap


    I feel they could have dramatically reduced all the butt hurt here by the simple inclusions of the words "current" and "if any", then.

    "What is your current religion, if any?", leaving the answer boxes as is. Seeing as given their explanation, it's clearly what they mean by the question.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,676 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    Absolam wrote: »
    Where in that does it say "The CSO wants"?
    Nice to see you're using information from the website by the way; some people were worried people wouldn't read it.

    images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSaUUYJvfh0smIQ6182jwkh_ZqXFetWvwlhLOnSJNlmBTQE-TdF

    images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSjINPkbzwEog6dlKe6S5epYVc2-Ic8Q2rRNHD25IDyakJ6Frqg

    images?q=tbn:ANd9GcR2LZrDAW2r_T1YvGYaAVTvKX8petdIsdxINzpBELgbpMjUa2dOYw


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,913 ✭✭✭Absolam


    Shrap wrote: »
    I feel they could have dramatically reduced all the butt hurt here by the simple inclusions of the words "current" and "if any", then.
    "What is your current religion, if any?", leaving the answer boxes as is. Seeing as given their explanation, it's clearly what they mean by the question.

    Probably; so far that seems like the closest to a sensible option. I have a feeling there might be some debate if the results came in about the same though; then the people who selected 'Catholic' (just as a for instance!) might be up for scrutiny on how well they understood the question still.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 24,421 Mod ✭✭✭✭robindch


    Absolam wrote: »
    Akrasia wrote: »
    Where in that does it say "The CSO wants"?
    Absolam wrote: »
    [...] I like to think my prose is more revelatory than obfuscatory.
    I think most people would accept that an FAQ from the CSO concerning the upcoming census accurately describes the CSO's wishes concerning the upcoming census.

    It's posts like the first one quoted here which help tip the balance in the ongoing moderator debate about whether or not you're trolling here in A+A.

    Please contribute useful posts, not useless ones.

    Thanking you.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,163 ✭✭✭Shrap


    Absolam wrote: »
    I have a feeling there might be some debate if the results came in about the same though; then the people who selected 'Catholic' (just as a for instance!) might be up for scrutiny on how well they understood the question still.

    I disagree. Have just had this exact same discussion with my OH, who was unsure (from the way the question is worded) whether to put down that his religion is Jewish even though he doesn't practice it. Now I've explained to him that it his current religion they are looking for, he is completely clear that his answer is "no religion". I'm certain he wouldn't be the only one confused by how to answer, as a lapsed *insert religion you were signed up to*.

    Until we had that conversation btw, he was under the impression I was being overly pedantic about the wording :rolleyes:


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