Home > Society & Lifestyle > Morals, Values & Norms > Social Values & Norms
Results so far:
| Christian | 67% | 250 votes | Total: 373 votes | |
| Common Era | 33% | 123 votes |
Created on: June 20, 2008
BCE/CE vs BC/AD
I am always amazed when people who are interested in secularizing a part of our society endeavor to turn a religion's own teachings upon itself as a way of justifying the proposed secularization. Why after so many centuries of using BC and AD is it suddenly important to dispense with the reference?
Perhaps the reason really isn't about standardizing the time annotation for all concerned as much as it is about removing religious references in the secular arena. What is it about religion that makes those who consider themselves to be "non-believers" feel that they must refute and/or eliminate all religious references from the public arena? As a way of validating the movement towards secularism, advocates seek to find as many opportunities as possible to bolster the secular argument, regardless of whether each opportunity truly resides in religion or if it has due to the passage of time transcended it's religious connotation. Thus we come back to BC and AD.
I wonder how many everyday people even know what AD stands for? Moreover if they know that it means anno Domine do they in turn know what that translates into? I think most people know it makes reference to Christ, but they think of it more in the secular sense regarding the notation of time. It seems rather extended to assume that each person whether Christian or non-Christian takes a moment to reflect on the religious meaning of BC and AD whenever in their daily lives they happen to encounter them.
If you take a moment to consider the use of BCE (Before Common Era) and CE (Common Era)you're confronted with an initial desire to understand why BC and AD are unacceptable. It's here that the flimsy foundation of logic from which BCE and CE were born rears it's misguided head. Who is to say what actually dictates the beginning of the Common Era. Perhaps the 16th Century would be a better point of separation. After all the development of global trade truly harkened in a new era for mankind. Maybe someone else has a better point of separation. The issue at hand is simple. BCE and CE are arbitrary renamings of the same time scale except they seem to make reference to some moment in time where the Common Era began. You can't, however, find any historical references to the Common Era. Why? Because it's simply an attempt to mask the Christian basis for the dating system. This contrived masking supposedly makes the Western calendar less unsettling for non-Christians. Of course most of the people in
Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:
Should ancient dates use the Christian BC/AD or Common Era BCE/CE acronymns?
Christian
Common Era
View all articles on: Should ancient dates use the Christian BC/AD or Common Era BCE/CE acronymns?
Featured Partner
Americans for Prosperity (AFP) is committed to educating citizens about economic policy and mobilizing those citizens as advocates in the public policy process. AFP is an organization of grassroots leaders who engage citizens in the name...more