Teahive wrote:Diogenes wrote:Let me give you the benefit of my wisdom. Christianity and Judaism owe their existence to made up stories. The stories are NOT TRUE. They were created by clever folk, to explain to simple uneducated people, a history which would induce them to believe and support the moral principles outlined in the History.
The principles were designed to improve the survivability characteristics of communities which adhered to them. It is the following of those principles to which we owe our current civilization. People will police themselves if they believe "God" is watching them. Convince them that there is no such thing and they will then look to their natural instinct for guidance. What that instinct will tell them is that they should do primarily what is in their own best interest.
To sum it up.
1. Yes, it's bullsh*t.
2. You better hope that bullsh*t is believed and that it continues.
Many "holy texts" are collections of parables and allegories, not unlike Grimm's Fairy Tales or other folk tales. Yet no one would seriously argue among adults that the latter should be taken literally and "believed". Neither should the former.
The fallacy in your argument is the implied assumption that the bible is entirely fairy tales. It is not. It is part fairy tales, and part real history. The real history contains real lessons. Noting that fairy tales are present does not invalidate the real history lessons.
Teahive wrote:
People will police themselves if they have a conscience and are capable of self-reflection.
The "conscience" is a by-product of their up bringing. Get raised in a culture where slavery is accepted and you will see nothing wrong with it.
Teahive wrote:
"God the punisher" is a crutch that is no longer needed once the lesson is learnt and internalized.
Every person has to learn this lesson newly during their life. You say it is no longer needed, but you overlook the fact that new lessons are always needed for new people. Every child must learn how to fit into the world in which he is born.
Teahive wrote:
A person taught accordingly will be able to make use of experience accumulated over generations, yet be able to question authority and imparted wisdom where necessary.
I think your scope is too short. People are not rational. Telling them they should behave because someone says so is not nearly as effective as telling them they should behave because a supernatural Deity who can kick the @ss of the Universe will get mad at them if they don't.
The "alpha" dog syndrome is instinctively understood in all mammals. It works where reason takes far too much time. (and therefore fails)
Teahive wrote:
Religious teaching as god-given, indubitable truth and authority is dangerous.
Not having such teachings is more dangerous. Religion occasionally gets corrupted and turned to the acquisition of power and the suppression of dissidents, but most of the time it has helped communities survive hard times. The number of people who's lives are protected vastly outnumber the number of people who were badly served by religion.
This is the same argument I make for drug interdiction. The problems are easily noted, while the benefits are generally not noted. Both issues are exactly like trying to figure out how many ships a lighthouse has saved.
You only notice the wrecks, not the successes.
Teahive wrote:
Power corrupts, and organized religion is not immune to that. Circumstances change, and people will have to look beyond the stories at the actual reasons for the morals and rules to examine their validity.
The average person cannot and will not do this. The reasons behind various moral admonitions do not always lend themselves to easy analysis. I have spent years pondering why certain moral notions became part of religious doctrine and why others did not. They are not always obvious.
It's far easier to say "Because God would be angry if you did" then it is to write a treatise on the topic.
Teahive wrote:
"to explain to simple uneducated people" is only the first step. The next one should be to make sure that they become educated people.
Hand waving. This is no simple task. We cannot even educate the American People on basic economics, what chance would anyone have of getting a populace to understand the social interactions of various moral tenets?
The "Santa Claus effect" works, and it's simple.
Teahive wrote:
Diogenes wrote:Had you been paying attention, you would have learned that I regard "acts of God" to be manifestations of nature occurrences that are very much like "Adam Smith's invisible hand" of economics. Certain sorts of behavior invite death and disaster, and Homosexual sex (prior to anti-biotics and anti-virals) is one of the worst threats a small community can face.
[...]
Who do you think is going to bother researching this? Atheists? Libertarians? Liberals? Of course not! The only people who are going to bother compiling evidence against homosexuality are those people who oppose it. Supporters and the indifferent certainly won't.
So if we take this at face value, they oppose it due to a belief in stories and rules founded on circumstances which no longer exist. This belief naturally leads to selection bias.
No. You are extrapolating again. There are real lessons learned from real experiences in which the conditions still apply. I can give you several examples, but this message is already too long.
Humanity doesn't evolve very quickly. The Humans of today are pretty much motivated by the same passions and instincts that motivated the humans of thousands of years ago.
If you look at the motivations and behavior of mankind as a constant, you can pretty much predict how they will respond in various circumstance. That "Liberal" doctrine that people can evolve to be better is probably 1% true, and occurs far more slowly than they can conceive. That is the reason why their ideas always fail. They never take into account that humans haven't and won't evolve fast enough to behave as they think humans should behave.
Instinctive greed kills socialism.
‘What all the wise men promised has not happened, and what all the damned fools said would happen has come to pass.’
— Lord Melbourne —