onesteptwostep
Junior Hegelian
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- Today 6:39 PM
- Joined
- Dec 7, 2014
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- 4,253
The weekend is here boys, let's talk about the intersections of religion, politics, economy, market, and history and morality. *cracks open beer*
I mean, secularism isn't bad per say, but I feel like we are losing a lot of history and cultural understanding by not tapping into the vast experience and human struggles that are born of religious endeavors. I think the category of faith and fidelity is being lost, and that the paradigm of virtue has shifted to a consumeristic, opportunistic, and lastly, an incrementally temporal race of status. Allegiance can be bought with wealth, and influence is power, and power being the absolute aspect and zenith of all human endeavors.
I'm aware that some of us on this forum come from a variety of hegemonic religious cultures (Burnout being from India, thus its hegemonic religion being Hinduism) but I think the case could be made that a lot of historical wisdom could be salvaged by looking into the historical conflicts these religious civilizations have begot and could be patched to certain ailing trends or situations of today. These religions don't span the great length of the democracies we so dearly uphold today- the best democratic nation on earth as is is only 250 years old, while the greatest religions outspan such polities by the hundreds and thousands of years.
Now, a religion isn't a political philosophy or a political structure, but such institutions have the same homosapien, the essence of which teaches us what happens when groups of people try and strive towards a certain goal. In a sense, religious organization is similar to a political structure, and the movement of people, the ideas and the alliances and the breaks and schisms and so on. The point is that these religious modes have the quality of faith- which our generation does not know. Not having faith I can understand and give a pass to, but not knowing the quality and earnestness of faith that drove our modern world is a great disservice to our historical knowledge. You can absolve from faith, but to be ignorant of it in any shape or form I feel is a dereliction of duty of man to know itself and his past.
Note, I am not saying to place faith on some pedestal or to take to it kindly, but understand it for what it is and what it meant to our ancestors. Empathy is key here.
Without an empathy to faith, I feel it is almost near impossible to understand what the trajectory of humankind was up until the modern age. Have faith? No, but understand it as it were in historical terms? I think that should be a given to all liberal minded men. What say ye old tired men of intpf? But first off, let me hand you a beer...
<(''<)
I mean, secularism isn't bad per say, but I feel like we are losing a lot of history and cultural understanding by not tapping into the vast experience and human struggles that are born of religious endeavors. I think the category of faith and fidelity is being lost, and that the paradigm of virtue has shifted to a consumeristic, opportunistic, and lastly, an incrementally temporal race of status. Allegiance can be bought with wealth, and influence is power, and power being the absolute aspect and zenith of all human endeavors.
I'm aware that some of us on this forum come from a variety of hegemonic religious cultures (Burnout being from India, thus its hegemonic religion being Hinduism) but I think the case could be made that a lot of historical wisdom could be salvaged by looking into the historical conflicts these religious civilizations have begot and could be patched to certain ailing trends or situations of today. These religions don't span the great length of the democracies we so dearly uphold today- the best democratic nation on earth as is is only 250 years old, while the greatest religions outspan such polities by the hundreds and thousands of years.
Now, a religion isn't a political philosophy or a political structure, but such institutions have the same homosapien, the essence of which teaches us what happens when groups of people try and strive towards a certain goal. In a sense, religious organization is similar to a political structure, and the movement of people, the ideas and the alliances and the breaks and schisms and so on. The point is that these religious modes have the quality of faith- which our generation does not know. Not having faith I can understand and give a pass to, but not knowing the quality and earnestness of faith that drove our modern world is a great disservice to our historical knowledge. You can absolve from faith, but to be ignorant of it in any shape or form I feel is a dereliction of duty of man to know itself and his past.
Note, I am not saying to place faith on some pedestal or to take to it kindly, but understand it for what it is and what it meant to our ancestors. Empathy is key here.
Without an empathy to faith, I feel it is almost near impossible to understand what the trajectory of humankind was up until the modern age. Have faith? No, but understand it as it were in historical terms? I think that should be a given to all liberal minded men. What say ye old tired men of intpf? But first off, let me hand you a beer...
