I have to agree here.Quote:
Originally posted by FDor
I think that there are no special chaplains in Starfleet roster. Counselor has taken a role of 'chaplain' as a person you can talk to if you have to.
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Just thinking about how many religions there are in Earth nowadays (count in all branches and cults) and then expand that to hundreds or thousands of planets. It would require a fleet of chaplains to be spear around all ships. =)
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Vesku
If you want to be true to Roddenberry, humans of the future are supposed to evolve beyond the need for gods altogether. To see the TREK stance on religion, one only needs to watch TOS's "Who Mourns For Adonais?" and TNG's "Who Watches The Watchers."
Roddenberry (as well as his friend, Isaac Asimov) was a (secular) Humanist and positted that the majority of humanity would have adopted Humanism or a similar philosophy by TREK's time frame. Humanism embraces reason, democracy, and compassion above all else, is staunchly atheistic, and believes that mankind has the ability to solve its own problems without the need for gods or religions.
While I am not an atheist (I am Taoist & Buddhist), I personally find that Humanism is the only agreeable form of atheism.
My point in this: There wouldn't be a chaplains corps in Starfleet because the majority of Humanist mankind wouldn't have a use for it. And, although Vulcans have a non-theistic religion similar to Buddhism, their adherence to logic, reason, and freedom would also obviate the need for an organized chaplains corps.
That mankind is Humanist in the future doesn't mean religion, at large, would vanish. . . (There are the Bajorans, for example). But, Starfleet, as a policy, would leave the practice of religion up to the individual practitioner.
So, from the Roddenberry perspective, the Counselors Corps is the Chaplains Corps. (But, of course, that doesn't have to be the case for your game.)
(PS: For more information on Humanism, go to: http://www.americanhumanist.org/ )