Rob Roy
Well-Known Member
I think the primitive people you were referring to may be on Sentinel Island in the Indian ocean.
My thoughts...
I would define religion as the belief in a superhuman entity or superhuman things that have powers humans or in some cases, most humans, do not have. I say most humans because some religions feature humans as the superhuman entity, which is by design often to achieve control. For instance, the religion of Government. (more on that later if you are curious why belief in government is a religion)
Some aspects of some religions are clearly gibberish and don't hold up under scrutiny since they rely on superstition, ingrained and repetitive dogma and flawed conclusions based or built on other flawed illogical or self contradictory conclusions etc.
While other aspects of some religions are "good" and transcend the religion itself and become beneficial guides for people to follow, such as "being good to other people" etc. These aspects would be good to follow whether a person believed the rest of the erroneous dogma of a particular religion. These aspects are "good" in and of themselves. For instance, I could embrace much of what Christ purported to say, without believing or being a hook, line and sinker Christian.
In a nutshell, I wouldn't say people have been better off with religions than without them, but people are better off practicing some of the good aspects or tenets of religions without embracing the bad or nonsensical aspects.
Religions for the most part have a lifespan, and people grow out of them, when they do, if it involves abandoning the bad aspects of the religion while carrying forward the better aspects, humans benefit. Human civilizations are technologically advanced compared to the past but still captive to emotion, and susceptible to being duped on a large scale. It's fascinating to watch it play it out, but a little frightening too.
You can't pray or vote something which isn't true to become true. The Universe laughs at that and the Universe is old and wise, maybe even amused by humans.
My thoughts...
I would define religion as the belief in a superhuman entity or superhuman things that have powers humans or in some cases, most humans, do not have. I say most humans because some religions feature humans as the superhuman entity, which is by design often to achieve control. For instance, the religion of Government. (more on that later if you are curious why belief in government is a religion)
Some aspects of some religions are clearly gibberish and don't hold up under scrutiny since they rely on superstition, ingrained and repetitive dogma and flawed conclusions based or built on other flawed illogical or self contradictory conclusions etc.
While other aspects of some religions are "good" and transcend the religion itself and become beneficial guides for people to follow, such as "being good to other people" etc. These aspects would be good to follow whether a person believed the rest of the erroneous dogma of a particular religion. These aspects are "good" in and of themselves. For instance, I could embrace much of what Christ purported to say, without believing or being a hook, line and sinker Christian.
In a nutshell, I wouldn't say people have been better off with religions than without them, but people are better off practicing some of the good aspects or tenets of religions without embracing the bad or nonsensical aspects.
Religions for the most part have a lifespan, and people grow out of them, when they do, if it involves abandoning the bad aspects of the religion while carrying forward the better aspects, humans benefit. Human civilizations are technologically advanced compared to the past but still captive to emotion, and susceptible to being duped on a large scale. It's fascinating to watch it play it out, but a little frightening too.
You can't pray or vote something which isn't true to become true. The Universe laughs at that and the Universe is old and wise, maybe even amused by humans.