I simply disagree. Meeting the threat of war with WAR = being warlike. Perhaps not AS MUCH warlike as the aggressor, but still warlike. The completely non-warlike options would be to offer diplomatic concessions or seek to bribe the aggressors into leaving you alone, or just giving up. Not taking up arms in defense.
Your dismissal of wars that were completely between polytheists as "not counting" due to potential motivations for wanting more sacrifices seems odd as well. Why does that not count? That's a super violent and possible even more shocking reason to start a war IMO than for land or converts...
I am quite amazed that you are still arguing this point.
1. Religious War (or any war for that matter) is not a game. If some crazy bunch of monotheists turn up and decide to kill you for worshipping 'idols' then you are not waging a religious war if you drive them out. You are still not waging a religious war if your fellow 'idol-worsippers' decide to help out because they are also threatened on an entirely secular basis.
However in real-life there are conflicting accounts and it may be that earlier you polytheists turned up and killed the monotheists due to their atheism and they were retaliating. This means that religious wars between the two groups cannot accurately gage the propensity of either group to engage in religious wars, only the total propensity of religion in general to have religious wars.
But because we are only interested in the relative religious violence propensity of each group and not each individual religions propensity we do not have the same problem with inter-category religious violence. It does not matter if the Crusades are Christianity or Islam's fault because it still counts as an example of monotheistic religious violence in general we do not have to pin it on anyway.
2. The difference here is that there is no argument about religion between the two camps nor is there is any clear religious definition of the camps. The two groups are fighting over resources (people to sacrifice) not over religion, though the reason they demand those resources is certainly religious. I do not actually believe in the whole sacrifice story by the way, I think the wars were primarily secular in nature.
The Crusades are a religious war because whatever the secular motives the factions were defined along religious lines, Catholicism (as a whole) irrespective of political allegiance is called to fight against Islam (irrespective of political allegiance) to obtain something that the religion wished to possess (the Holy Land) and officially called by the Pope.
We would not call the Papal States attacking a wealthy city-state in Italy in order to loot it of candles in order to place in St. Peter's basilica a religious war simply because the material requirements for religious worship are thus aquired. The Aztecs and their enemies 'require' sacrifices for their religious worship, just as also they require food and water resources for their clergy.
Anybody can write a book on anything. Academic field books are worth more as evidence of something when written by people who are well established in a field with peer-reviewed publication history. Otherwise it's just some dude writing some opinions with no guarantees whatsoever that anybody else in the field actually thinks he is not crazy (and thus no guarantees that he is actually not crazy...). There are a LOT of peer reviewed history journals, and most historians recognized as experts do indeed have a well established publication history in them.
It actually does not matter if all the people in his field think he is crazy or not. It really does not matter, either he is right and his ideas have both reason and evidence backing them up or they do not. If his ideas have neither (or just one) then he is probably wrong.
By no means do you have to conform to one single story to get published in those, either. People have half a dozen conflicting theories in journals all the time -- the peer review process is primarily about verifying that the research methods are sound and that the argument stands up at all and evidence is provided, versus just some crackpot theory. It's not about forcing a party line. That's actually counter productive to their mission statements.
It is about making sure that while the theories may conflict on details they do not violate the fundemental philosophical and ideological assumptions that are held in common by the group. The group is mostly self-selecting but the government and the media also have a pretty big role.
If I am wrong then good luck publishing your Creationism and Astrology in any respected scientific journal for 'peer review'. You won't be able to because those ideas violate the fundermental philosophical and ideological assumptions of the group (they will not leave up to the peers to decide). Publishing your work for review puts them into disrepute, thus they will not do it, their reputation is more important than anything else.
The ideology of peer-review is therefore mainly a system of locking out, designed to consign ideological/philosophical deviants to the 'outer darkness' where they are forced to howl in the wilderness, the established core ideas secure against respectable criticism. The government and media have leeway in that they decide who is recognised AS an academic and thus whose reviews are taken seriously.
This is quite a cosy arrangement, provided that you are on the right side of the fence. The respected scientists get to establish a common generally consistant view of the world that they can present to the public with authority, ensuring that they are seen as higher beings that pass knowledge down to the ignorant common man. Governments and media get to define the group and status within it but at the same time the respected scientists find them useful as a stick with which to beat the dissidents.
This is accomplished through a mixture of ridicule and misrepresentation from the media and outright government coercion (think laws against teaching Creationism and Intelligent Design). None of this implies of course that those views or any other generally accepted psuedoscientific views are
actually correct, just how the mechanic works.
Here's somebody who went out and wrote a book too, without any peer-reviewed credentials: It's a Breatharian book about how you can live without any food from light and air alone:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/3929512351/002-9072932-0770442?ie=UTF8&tag=veganfruitari-20&linkCode=xm2&camp=1789&creativeASIN=3929512351
Should we treat this as a valuable research source?
I have never read the book and know nothing about the matter; though I do not believe that people can exist without food and water. But if for instance people could do it then the whole of existing science would be proven utterly false and therefore it is no surprise that nobody is peer reviewing it or taking it seriously.
It would ironically be a fairly easy thing to test though. Lock the author and any other believers in a room with only this book and see whether they can manage to avoid starving to death.
Okay. Well almost everybody else is interested, and you're trying to convince people in a public forum where things like this matter a lot.
Thing is that those are not my own ideas. While I agree with the fundermental negative assertion, that Polytheistic religions generally do not have wars of religion as I define them I do not believe in the opposite, that Monotheistic religions are inherantly warlike and there is no way that a Monotheistic religion can be peaceful or tolerant.
Actually, they counterargument to "all viewpoints are equal despite differing levels of evidence" is the Flying Spaghetti Monster.
But subsisting on light is pretty out there, too. I wonder what her explanation is for plump helmets.
I think she would be happy with goblins since they clearly follow her ideas to the letter.
The Flying Spaghetti Monster is not an argument. It is a crude strawman caricature that serves no function than to facilitate the inane mockery of religion by certain Atheistic individuals.
Mockery of other's ideas is generally a sign that one is simply dealing with an oppressive and narrow minded individual. The more reasonable the ideas actually are (when argued by their proponants), the more oppressive and narrow-minded said mockers are.
For the most part I feel that people are bringing their knowledge and beliefs to the table and expecting that to be the case in-game. (Excuse me if this is irrelevant, but I hope you'll understand my intentional oversight of the somewhat unrelated material).
As I understand it, the lack of specific events in history should not dictate that in a similar timeline of a similar reality whether it were to happen or not. (If that makes any sense). Within reason, if something was possible due to a series of events, it should be possible to replicate within Dwarf Fortress world generation. It's a mythical universe in which the player may interact and observe the history of its world - therefore the progression and behaviour of polytheistic tribes in reality should not be enacted within the game for the sake of realism but as result of the generation algorithm and player interaction. The motives for wars between polytheistic tribes should be dictated by this generation, and not limited by our understandings. Whether or whether not this is key to the argument, please keep this in mind.
Funny thing is I never actually said that I had a problem with Polytheistic religious wars. Indeed they are a fundermental part of my system but as part of the development of Monotheism out of the Polytheistic system.
Please, educate us GoblinCookie. How did the flat world belief operate? What would happen if someone were to fall off? How deep did people believe they could go without digging through? What kept the world in place? - surely if it were eternally falling, an individual on the surface would forever be floating if he had jumped. How did the deities control and interact with this world?
Surely your vast array of knowledge could be put to better use answering these questions for us than by debating problems which would automatically be solved by interactions in world generation.
Also would you do us the favour of explaining how polytheistic tribes believed and expected deities to interact with them, each other, the world, and especially the deities of other pantheons and religions. Knowing how things like this worked would enable the construction of an algorithm to automatically solve the gaps in history, as you pointed out, in the intentions for wars between polytheistic tribes and peoples.
Also, anyone else with available knowledge please contribute.
Ummmmm, I am one of the people arguing that the game universe is actually round. Ask someone else.