Becuase the punishment is for being a bad Muslim, and thus changing what it means to be Muslim. There's anther Pew research paper which was linked to the first one:
http://www.pewforum.org/2013/04/30/t...s/#hostilities
That covers this in more detail.
That does not answer my question. My question is why you think they use the self-identification criterion as a means to determine who is a Muslim.
For example, it is apparent that some people accused of apostasy state that they are atheists, or Christians, etc., but they will all be punished anyway. If the punishers adopt the self-identification criterion, then they're punishing someone who, by their own criterion, is not a Muslim.
I suppose you might say that the criterion is "once self-identified as a Muslim after reaching adulthood, always a Muslim" (even if a person is in fact not a Muslim), but why do you think the criteria is like that, and does not count people raised as Muslims as "always Muslim", even if they never identified - at least as adults - as Muslims? And why do you think they care if a person reached adulthood when self-identifies as a Muslim, assuming they do care about the self-identification criterion?
I can't be certaib, since that wasn't covered. However, it isn't punished by any Muslims I know, which is a considerable variety.
What is covered is that they want to punish people for apostasy. Why do you think that only people who once identified as Muslims when adults are to be punished if they stop being Muslims?
As for the Muslims you know, do you know of any Muslims who would not punish people raised as Muslims but who become non-Muslims as adults, but who
would in fact want the death penalty (or at least some other harsh punishment) for someone who, say, is raised as a Muslim, self-identifies as a Muslim as an adult, but then stops being a Muslim?
If your answer is "no", then it seems clear to me that the Muslims that you know do not provide evidence that the Muslims who replied to the poll make a distinction based on whether an apostate ever self-identified as a Muslim as an adult.
Purely for example,
this woman was accused of apostasy, even though it seems she was raised as a Christian, and didn't self-identify as a Muslim.
My question is: why do you think that all or at least most or a significant percentage of the people who respond to the poll and favor the death penalty for apostasy, would refrain from favoring such punishment on the basis that a person was only raised as Muslim, but failed to identify as a Muslim as an adult?
Togo said:
What does happen is the family gets ashamed and upset, and that in itself a cause problems, exactly as when a christian religious family has an atheist child. I don't want to imply that those situations arn't serious - they are - but they're common to several relgions, as a brief sweep of the atheiest converstion experiences section of the forum will show.
Christian families in present-day Western countries do not seem very similar, but leaving that aside, that sort of reaction from Christian families is common regardless of whether the person identified herself as a Christian for a while after becoming an adult, or, say, stopped identifying as a Christian when she was 12, 13, or 14.
Why would you think that the sort of Muslim reaction we're talking about (i.e., support for the death penalty) would be based on whether a person self-identifies as a Muslim as an adult?
Togo said:
Some cultures do of course punish those who renounce their beliefs, and you can see in this various religious and secular communities around the world. This may be anything from a full-blown criminal trial through to simply distrusting those who's beliefs aren't fully understood.
Again, if you think there's something unique to Islam going on here, then you're welcome to provide evidence for it.
I don't think violence like that is unique to Islam, of course. But I seriously doubt the people who disagree with you in this thread believe that Islam is the only religion that has the problem of promoting violence against innocent people.
The question here never was whether Islam is the only religion that makes its adherents violent.
That aside, there is a considerable difference between the problem of people who mistrust those who abandon their beliefs, and people who favor executing, imprisoning, canning, etc., those who abandon their beliefs.