as Nagel notes, our culture is characterised by a deep-seated 'fear of religion'. — Wayfarer
We're not necessarily geared to 'live in peace', we're geared to pass on our genes.
— praxis
Please provide the names of everyone who enjoys psychological suffering and wants theirs to continue. — Jake
The problem here is that science is bound to a worldview in which the universe is essentially meaningless. So meaning itself can only ever be personal or social - it can't have any referent beyond either the individual or the collective. — Wayfarer
But, what is 'religion'? There are actually two derivations: one is 'religio', 'attitude of awe and reverence towards the Gods'. But there's also another - 're-ligare', to tie or to bind, yoke or join. 'Religion' had originally many sources; most of what is remembered relates to the former category. But, I would argue, in the latter category, are the sources that flowed from the shamans, from ascetic practices, accessing particular modes of consciousness - the kinds of things that are preserved in Buddhism.
OK, you might say - that's not 'religion'. But if not - what is it? Where does it belong? Who teaches it? Where do you learn about it? — Wayfarer
'Western culture' is stuck in this death role of 'enlightenment science' vs 'superstitious religion' which is where a lot of people seem to be.
Enlightenment rationalists, religions haven’t simply shrivelled and died, but are still hugely influential in culture and society. And that’s because they stand for something, they represent realities which can’t be depicted in any other terms.
— Wayfarer
What realities would that be?
— praxis
To think of a few examples at random - the sacred feminine/motherhood/Mother Mary/Kwan Yin
The Hero's Journey, the hero with a thousand faces.
Suffering/sacrifice/loss
Redemption/salvation/transcendence. — Wayfarer
People make omelettes and omelettes are made from egg, therefore people are eggs? — S
Religion is only good if a community finds it meaningful.
— praxis
That doesn't necessarily make it good. Is the religion of the cave prisoners, the primary meaning of which stems from shadows on the cave wall, good? Good compared to what? That's the question. Good compared to the same situation, but without shadows on the wall? That's understandable. Good compared to breaking free and seeing the world as it is? Much less understandable. Who needs cave shadows when there's a whole world full of natural wonder to explore? Suddenly the significance of cave shadows and the lives of the prisoners seems extraordinarily impoverished. — S
Who are we to question? — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Besides, we’re living in a ‘post-secular’ culture nowadays. Contrary to the hopes of Enlightenment rationalists, religions haven’t simply shrivelled and died, but are still hugely influential in culture and society. And that’s because they stand for something, they represent realities which can’t be depicted in any other terms. — Wayfarer
I disagree that "thought" or dualism is the problem, however. I believe the problem may center around particular thoughts, or rather concepts, that arise in our cultural conditioning, particularly those involving our self-concept, our personal narratives, etc.
— praxis
If this were true, if these problems arise from bad thought content, then over thousands of years some group of people would have found the correct thought content and would be living in peace. Other people would see their experience of peace, desire it, and adopt the correct thought content. Over time everyone would jump onboard and we'd be living in utopia. — Jake
If true, this has huge implications for philosophy. If the source of our problems is thought itself then no collection of thoughts, however clever, are likely to solve the problem. And this is what we in fact see in the real world. The best minds among us all over the world have been searching for the correct thought content for thousands of years, and here we still are, killing each other with abandon, enduring inner personal conflict etc. — Jake
Imho, religion is ultimately not about social cohesion, but personal "salvation", by which I mean achieving psychological reunion with nature, reality, god, whatever one wishes to call it.
Imho, such reunion is not technically possible because we have never been divided in the first place. So it's more accurate to say that religion (and other techniques) are about easing the illusion that we are alone, isolated, vulnerable, divided from reality. — Jake
Imho, that illusion is generated by the divisive nature of thought. Thought is a medium that operates by a process of conceptual division, and so everywhere we look we see division. The illusion is profound because not only are we observing reality through thought, we ourselves are made of thought psychologically. Thus, we are fully immersed in a medium whose primary function is division. — Jake
I think that Jake may be generally referring to existential anxiety. I don’t see how it could be natural to fear largeness or otherness.
Existential anxiety could be a natural consequence of how our minds evolved and, in a sense, is caused by ‘thought’. Our ability to form concepts of self and death, combined with our ability to simulate and anticipate future events may naturally lead to it.
— praxis
It seems that your first and second paragraph contradict each other. If existential anxiety is a natural consequence of how our minds evolved, then existential anxiety is natural. Any attempt to separate human beings from nature would be a mistake. Every animal has it's own unique set of physical and psychological adaptations to its environment. Humans are no different. — Harry Hindu
As for the existential anxiety that we experience from time to time, there are many non-religious methods for alleviating it. Take a look at these two links: — Harry Hindu
It shouldn't be scary to discover that meaning is within your own power to create and not in the hands of someone else. It is empowering. — Harry Hindu
I’ve been thinking there’s a problem with Christianity’s doctrine of salvation (soteriology). — Empedocles
First, we can observe in our own lives that we experience reality as being divided between "me" and "everything else". "Me" is very very small, and "everything else" is very very big. This is a perspective which naturally generates fear, which in turn generates inner and outer conflict and all kinds of related problems.
— Jake
Speak for yourself.
It seems to me, thanks to the knowledge science is providing, that everything is interconnected. I don't experience a fear of everything else. I experience curiosity. If it is fear that you experience, then no wonder you turn to a delusion - to alleviate that fear. — Harry Hindu
I also agree that a key problem for religion is that it typically tries to use thought (beliefs etc) to solve the problem, when in fact thought is the source of the problem. It's a process which can be like an alcoholic trying to cure his disease with a case of scotch. — Jake
First, we can observe in our own lives that we experience reality as being divided between "me" and "everything else". "Me" is very very small, and "everything else" is very very big. This is a perspective which naturally generates fear, which in turn generates inner and outer conflict and all kinds of related problems. — Jake
Jesus suggested "dying to be reborn", sometimes called love, a process of surrendering the "me" to something or somebody else. To the degree the "me" melts away in a particular situation, so does the perceived division, and thus the fear, and thus the inner conflict, and thus the outer conflict. The user dies to division and fear, and is reborn in to peace. — Jake
A personal purpose can be any methodology which helps heal the illusion of division which is fundamental to the human experience. — Jake
Christianity has lasted 2,000 years because the experience of love which it suggests works in helping people dilute an experience of reality as being divided between "me" and "everything else", an experience which generates fear and suffering — Jake
The typical person is not overly concerned with abstractions like enhancing social unity, but is instead engaging in religion to address their own personal situation. — Jake
Given the above, we necessarily interact with religion socially. Glue has no purpose without things to bind.
— praxis
So religion is only good if it brings people toward a common goal? — MountainDwarf
The essential or primary purpose is to provide a system of meaning that can bind a community in common values and purpose, like a kind of glue that holds a tribe together.
— praxis
Surely this is a big factor. An essential purpose of religion? Ok, agreed.
But the primary purpose of religion is ultimately personal. — Jake
Religions don't go on for thousands of years based on abstractions like "binding a community together in common values and purpose". — Jake
I remain surprised at the reluctance to consider the cause — Marcus de Brun
Again, your error is in assuming this instinct is necessarily expressed as theism. It can be expressed in many different forms.
— praxis
Again you are applying a rather shallow and 'criticism-hunting' approach to what I write. I dont mind the criticism if it is a reflection of what I am attempting to say. — Marcus de Brun
Theism, ... is constructed upon a thought construct a basis that is common to all men — Marcus de Brun
The theistic logic, the belief system that all humans have — Marcus de Brun
the underlying universal theism — Marcus de Brun
the true theistic basis of human existence — Marcus de Brun
The same for hunger and eating, there is a primordial and instinctual basis for these practices and their associated beliefs, a primordial basis that is related back to human instinct. — Marcus de Brun
God is merely a refinement of the original thought-construct and is non-essential to a Theism or belief system that is constructed upon a notion of the immaterial. — Marcus de Brun
It's true the philosophical process involves in it a value of critical judgement and skepticism but I don't think that stands in contrast to religion — aporiap
so you can come up some answers of your own... — ChatteringMonkey
How to deal with emotions? — ChatteringMonkey
The majority of philosophers are known for their philosophical systems, which serve as worldviews, 'answers'. — aporiap
I think good philosophy should also provide some answers. And it does that too... just not in this case it seems. — ChatteringMonkey
We are biological beings, and part of our brain is the limbic system that controls emotions and instincts — ChatteringMonkey
Rather, in accordance with your claim that art provides an "religious jag," whatever art is congruent with their religious views would have the greatest potential to "induce an arrest in normal everyday consciousness" (what you claim is the goal or function of art) and whatever art was incongruent with their system of beliefs and meaning would likely fail to induce such an arrest in normal consciousness. Right?
— praxis
I don't think it's that cut and dried. — gurugeorge
secular humanists can enjoy the older, religious works of art, and religious people can enjoy some modernist art too — gurugeorge
the function of art as providing an arrest in normal everyday consciousness transcends questions of meaning in that social sense — gurugeorge
But to be really clear, then perhaps i should stick to "mystical" instead of religious. — gurugeorge
I do believe that mysticism is more at the root of religion than the kind of "social glue" factors that rationalists usually canvass, though they are important too. — gurugeorge
You haven't proven your point. Sorry. — frank
It's not good for democracy to erode the independence of law enforcement and the judiciary, and it's not good for democracy to deliberately undermine the free press.
— praxis
Lincoln suspended the right to writ of habeas corpus. Democracy got along just fine. I think you'd probably agree the present situation is fairly tame in comparison, yet you declare the sky is falling. Why is that? — frank
A new report concludes that one effect of these rollbacks and changes to regulatory agencies is 80,000 deaths each year.
— praxis
That's a worrying speculation. May we have some proof that 80,000 people died because of those regulatory changes? — frank
With the new tax bill that number is expected to increase by 13 million in ten years.
— praxis
Do I need to explain the difference between a stray expectation and proof? — frank
Prove that he's bad for our country or democracy if your heart can handle the challenge. — frank
I'm not faint. Dow Jones loves him. QED. — frank
