A Last Word On Hitchens
Jun. 19th, 2011 12:22 pmI spent much of yesterday on Hitchens' website. I think he's doing important work. Someone needs to be knocking religion- and he's good at it. But only up to a point. The debate never gets much more sophisticated than "So where did Cain's wife come from, eh?" He's a clever person of limited culture- with a layman's understanding of Victorian science- butting against positions that became untenable a hundred and fifty years ago. It's a weary old war and I withdrew from it a while ago, but I'm glad there are still people out there in the field, bashing away.
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Date: 2011-06-19 01:37 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2011-06-19 01:43 pm (UTC)This is what I don't get: why?
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Date: 2011-06-19 01:43 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2011-06-19 02:00 pm (UTC)Because it messes up people's lives in all sorts of ways.
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Date: 2011-06-19 03:35 pm (UTC)To your point B: while it's quite possible to point to ways in which specific people, and cultures, have been messed up by religion, it is ALSO quite possible to point out ways in which OTHER people, and cultures, have had their lives ENHANCED by religion. I've never seen any real analysis about whether the net effect is positive or negative. Have you?
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Date: 2011-06-19 03:43 pm (UTC)But let's remove the EXCUSE, and try them as criminals.
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Date: 2011-06-19 03:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-06-19 03:53 pm (UTC)Why don't you try coming up with a reason it should remain?
I want to see all organised religion dismantled, and I believe it will inevitably happen. I think we're evolving away from it, and it can't happen fast enough.
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Date: 2011-06-19 04:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-06-19 04:03 pm (UTC)Because it is one route to meaning.
Because it is one manner in which people can feel a connection to a larger community, and thereby to feel a connection to something larger than their own existence.
Because it has the ability to be a method for transmitting ethical and moral tropes, and training people into pro-social behavior.
Because it can be a source of inspiration for artwork.
Because it can be a connection to history, and give people a sense of context.
Because it can be a way of spiritually understanding the world.
Is religion the ONLY way to do any of these things? No, absolutely not. But it is one way to do these things. Similarly, is religion the ONLY way to justify murder and abuse? No, but it one way.
So, religion is a conduit to many things, some negative, but many positive. And, in fact, in its modern forms, it tends to be generally slightly better at its positive manifestations.
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Date: 2011-06-19 04:16 pm (UTC)Humans are inherently moral. Lessons can be as effective provided in a secular way.
Everything inspires art.
Community is about people participating - that is not peculiar to religion.
If you had any other activity that made people believe something essentially psychotic; that opened children up to sexual abuse and then shielded their abusers so they could continue to abuse; that resulted in people committing mass murders not just once, but regularly and for the last two thousand years; that separated people and made it impossible for them to come together as human beings (Yugoslavia, anyone? Genocide, anyone? Ireland? Anyone want to mention what happened to the millions of Aztecs?); and that protects the people who do the murdering, and places them in unassailable positions of power; that bases its precepts on an invisible magic being, but expects to be included in decisions of government - If you had any other organisation of which this was true you would stand back and call it what it is: it is mad. It is dangerous. It is poisonous.
And religion - those crusty books handed down by crusty men who so fear women - has NOTHING whatsoever to do with god or with any understanding of humans' position in the great order of the universe. I believe that that is the lie which
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Date: 2011-06-19 04:38 pm (UTC)I take your point B. Clearly there's no way of quantifying the positive and negative effects of religion. There are times and places in which it has had a civilising effect. Gothic architecture or the crusades- which weighs more? But we're talking about the past- about a time when religion was so closely woven into the fabric of society that it's impossible to separate out. Things changed at the end of the Middle Ages and religion, still clinging to a world view that is no longer credible- has become a drag on the intellectual and spiritual development of humanity.
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Date: 2011-06-19 04:38 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2011-06-19 06:34 pm (UTC)Also, of course secularism has nothing to pat itself on the back about when compared to religion. When rationalist atheists are in charge, they're every bit as bad as the worst religious fanatics. What about the millions of people tortured, enslaved, and murdered during the Terror, during the reigns of Lenin and Stalin and Mao, during Pol Pot's time in power? All of those were secular, rationalist atheist regimes.
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Date: 2011-06-19 06:35 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-06-19 08:25 pm (UTC)