Cognisant
cackling in the trenches
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I'm re-posting this from the "China's crackdown on Religion" to put the focus on religion itself, if you're interested in talking about religion in politics go to the other thread, likewise I'll try to keep the criticism of religion in general here.
Do people need religion?
It could be argued that people are inherently delusional hence why we're not all fatalistic apathetic nihilists and since I'm not like that (all the time) it's a fair assumption that I too have my delusions. Heck maybe the reason I hate religion so much is that it seems everyone else gets to share their delusions whereas mine a more idiosyncratic. Of course I'm not the only atheist but being an atheist isn't really something that unites people, kinda like a no-golfing club, I love not playing golf, I don't play golf all the time.
In any case I don't think people need religion, I can certainly see the appeal and why it has such incredible staying power but I think there's a fundamental difference between my delusion and the religious delusion, that being the open acknowledgement that being anything but an fatalistic apathetic nihilist is delusional. I hope to live long enough to benifit from technological life extension, to go out there among the stars and live what I consider the true life (one where I'm not constrained by the limitations of a finite lifespan) but I don't expect it, y'know hope for the best but expect the worst.
Is religion beneficial?
Putting ethics aside for now, there are many religious people throughout history and modern day who have done good deeds and made achievements that will benefit all mankind, however I don't think any of their deeds or achievements can be directly attributed to religion. On the other hand I think there's plenty of setbacks and atrocities that can be directly attributed to religion even if religion wasn't the sole motivating factor, events like parents subjecting their children to brainwashing, physical abuse (exorcism), faith healing (denying them needed medical attention) and genital mutilation (look up female circumcision).
Then there's the rampant pedophilia and other abuses of power/privilege for which religious institutions have a deeply ingrained culture of denial, a culture which I believe stems from the fundamental nature of religious institutions being gatherings of people for the purpose of mutually assisted self-delusion.
Is religion ethical?
I don't think self-delusion is fundamentally unethical, irresponsible maybe, you certainly don't see many atheists in lynch mobs or protesting outside women's health clinics, there are however many non-religious charities which unlike say the Salvation Army don't discriminate with who they provide help to as a form of proselytization.
Cognisant said:Alright here's my perspective on religion, it's a bunch of people coming together to lie to each other so they can more easily lie to themselves.
There's many reasons for this behaviour:
If you ask a religious person if they know their deity or whatever exists they might say they do, and if you ask them how they'll say they feel it or they just know or they had some kind of drug induced supernatural experience. That's not knowledge, that's choosing to believe, people choose to believe what they want to believe in spite of the evidence because they want to believe it, that isn't reason that is self delusion.
- If you've had a shitty life the prospect of a heavenly afterlife is very appealing.
- If you've suffered at the hands of others the prospect of them being punished for it by some divine arbiter of justice is very appealing.
- If someone you love has died the prospect that they still exist in some metaphysical sense in which you will one day join them is very appealing.
- Death itself is a horrifying reality, just about any alternative would be very appealing.
- The uncertainty of life is a horrifying reality, I was on the bus today and the driver took both hands off the wheel to retrieve a snack from a plastic container, in that moment I was acutely aware that his negligence could get me killed. I don't believe in a divine plan, I don't feel safe in the "knowledge" that everything happens for a reason, I think shit just happens and I was fucking worried.
- There's a lot of comfort to be gained by simply being part of something, that there are people in this world you have never met with whom you have solidarity.
- It's also really nice to feel special, the creator of the universe didn't just create humanity, he created you, he cares about you, indeed you're important to him because not only did he create you he also chose you to be one of his chosen people, the people he prefers above all others, his people.
Instead they might admit they don't know if their deity or whatever exists, they that they merely believe, but they don't mean that their deity or whatever's existence is merely hypothetical. For anyone who has faith that is already beyond question, the uncertainty they're confessing to is uncertainty in their knowledge of that deity or whatever. The distinction is important because the word "belief" is used to hide the delusion, to stop us from calling them out on claiming to know something they don't actually know.
That is the essential nature of religion, people claiming to know something they don't actually know, coming together to lie to each other so they can more easily lie to themselves, it is blatant and willful self-delusion.
Do people need religion?
It could be argued that people are inherently delusional hence why we're not all fatalistic apathetic nihilists and since I'm not like that (all the time) it's a fair assumption that I too have my delusions. Heck maybe the reason I hate religion so much is that it seems everyone else gets to share their delusions whereas mine a more idiosyncratic. Of course I'm not the only atheist but being an atheist isn't really something that unites people, kinda like a no-golfing club, I love not playing golf, I don't play golf all the time.
In any case I don't think people need religion, I can certainly see the appeal and why it has such incredible staying power but I think there's a fundamental difference between my delusion and the religious delusion, that being the open acknowledgement that being anything but an fatalistic apathetic nihilist is delusional. I hope to live long enough to benifit from technological life extension, to go out there among the stars and live what I consider the true life (one where I'm not constrained by the limitations of a finite lifespan) but I don't expect it, y'know hope for the best but expect the worst.
Is religion beneficial?
Putting ethics aside for now, there are many religious people throughout history and modern day who have done good deeds and made achievements that will benefit all mankind, however I don't think any of their deeds or achievements can be directly attributed to religion. On the other hand I think there's plenty of setbacks and atrocities that can be directly attributed to religion even if religion wasn't the sole motivating factor, events like parents subjecting their children to brainwashing, physical abuse (exorcism), faith healing (denying them needed medical attention) and genital mutilation (look up female circumcision).
Then there's the rampant pedophilia and other abuses of power/privilege for which religious institutions have a deeply ingrained culture of denial, a culture which I believe stems from the fundamental nature of religious institutions being gatherings of people for the purpose of mutually assisted self-delusion.
Is religion ethical?
I don't think self-delusion is fundamentally unethical, irresponsible maybe, you certainly don't see many atheists in lynch mobs or protesting outside women's health clinics, there are however many non-religious charities which unlike say the Salvation Army don't discriminate with who they provide help to as a form of proselytization.