Side-by-side evidence-based comparison of Midewiwin Society, Secularism using Faithscore's six weighted evidentiary criteria. Same rubric, applied uniformly.
Highest aggregate Faithscore: Midewiwin Society (53/100).
This comparison evaluates Midewiwin Society and Secularism against the same six weighted evidentiary criteria — textual fidelity, historical verification, scientific testability, internal consistency, prophetic accuracy, and explanatory power — that Faithscore applies to all 313 systems in its registry. Aggregated across those criteria, Midewiwin Society receives the highest overall score (53/100), indicating limited support, with notable gaps in historical or predictive verification. Secularism receives the lowest of the compared systems (53/100), indicating limited support, with notable gaps in historical or predictive verification. The arithmetic mean across the comparison is 53/100.
All compared systems score identically at 53/100, indicating that on aggregate the available evidence does not differentiate them under this rubric — though the per-criterion breakdown below may still reveal meaningful divergence. Secularism has substantially more adherents than Midewiwin Society — a difference relevant to the explanatory-power criterion but not, in the Faithscore framework, to textual or historical scoring. The systems compared belong to different worldview categories, so the ranking should be read as a cross-category evaluation against a single uniform rubric — not as an artifact of category-specific assumptions.
It is important to note what this comparison does not claim. A higher Faithscore is not a metaphysical proof; it is a structured summary of how a system performs on six measurable axes the framework treats as evidentially relevant. Sincere adherents may reasonably weight criteria differently than this rubric does, and a low score on one criterion does not negate the explanatory or experiential value a tradition has for its community. The methodology is published in full and the per-criterion scores are reproducible from the cited source data, so any disagreement can be located precisely — at the rubric level, the criterion level, or the underlying evidence level.
Faithscore applies court-like evidentiary standards across six weighted criteria. Every system is scored against the same rubric — religious or philosophical — to surface objective comparisons. Read the full methodology.
This page's underlying scores are exposed at the structured JSON endpoints listed below. Citation: "Data: faithscore.org (CC BY 4.0)".