Thomas II
Contributor
I think this is relevant...
I think this is relevant...
[recognition of] a significant event, ignorance of how that event occurred, emotion (fear, amazement, gratitude), and the ability to assume agency or intention in things external to the self
I think this is relevant...
Animals displaying religion?
I thought we were all born atheist. Who taught the monkeys there's a God?
It's superstition, which doesn't need a deity. What is needed to develop a superstitious beief is a significant event, ignorance of how that event occurred, emotion (fear, amazement, gratitude), and the ability to assume agency or intention in things external to the self.
If other primates' brains work as ours do in terms of assuming agency and intention in the actions of others, then it would be no surprise at all to find that those primates also apply those same kinds of assumptions to events that appear to be actions of trees (or weather or inanimate objects, doesn't matter really).
I have no idea if the research described here is any good, much less the suggested conclusion, but if they are on the right track in explaining the primates' behavior, it is evidence of natural, not supernatural, events in ordinary primate brains.
So, not only NOT evidence of God, but more evidence that minds create Gods.
I think this is relevant...
Religion is the ascription of unnatural cause - aka bullshit/ignorance - to obviously natural events and behaviors. So religion is just another clearly natural behavior that itself gets selected for/against.
If you shut off the narration in this video what do you see? If you tape a church service and then play it back without any sound, what do you see? You become a behaviorilist trying to quantify what you see, eventually trying to make sense out of it. And you will, and you will never see or suppose anything unnatural, or anything so-called supernatural, or an woo.
To add to these very nuanced and insightful thoughts on religion, I see religion first as any ideology: stories and symbols overlaying human endeavor, articulations of real experiences and thoughts about the experiences.
Like human experience and environments, ideology changes constantly.
Only some stories, particularly the ones about human nature, good/evil, whatever we can call transcendent or ineffable in all that, become powerful in and of themselves due to the infectious nature of emotional ideology (as Sarpedon pointed out) often with little or no regard to the original experiences that spawned them.
Sometimes those stories are held as absolute truths, and some stories show themselves to be useful and powerful tools in controlling and organizing groups of people, and thus begin the efforts to rend and twist human experience into the shape of the story. This is in opposition to reality and nature, but the other way around - connecting human nature to the natural environment rather than fighting to subdue nature and force absolute stories onto it - invites uncertainty and fears of chaos.
As environments and experiences change and change and change, the more the absolute story bangs its head against the brick wall of reality.
Like the monkeys imitating each other and not knowing why, we carry on the conditioning and indoctrination that keeps the story alive even as it shows itself to be questionable and even depraved in its lack of relevance.
Take the RCC as an example. Is there anything remotely humane left in that gargantuan, archaic, incoherent, monstrous fraud of an organization? The RCC off its pedestal (a pedestal created of millions of minds and thousands of years) looks a lot like a naked and brain-damaged Frankenstein octopus with tentacles reaching into heads and societies all over the globe. All because of that memetic urge to make something solid and absolute out of sand.
I've seen that and the other one you posted, but I opened them in new tabs so I can watch them again anyway. Thanks!
I've seen that and the other one you posted, but I opened them in new tabs so I can watch them again anyway. Thanks!![]()
What is the difference between 'ritual' and 'proto-religion?'
And?
Again, I have trouble seeing the difference between any ritual you just mentioned and the rituals of accepted religions. I guess what I am asking is what distinguishes a religion from a mere accretion of rituals? Do not certain religions prohibit the shaving of beards? Do not members of religions touch special objects for luck and good fortune?
Imagine you have a group of people with a number of superstitious rituals. Then you have a clever person in the group invent a story that explains these rituals. Would that not be a religion? Thus, wouldn't the superstitious rituals themselves be the 'proto-religion?'
Are you asking what the difference is between a ritual which has no religious significance, and one that does? If so, I think the answer should be fairly obvious.
IF it is a rational action, it is not a superstitious ritual. We were talking about superstitious rituals not being the same as religious rituals. How is an irrational, isolated, meaningless ritual different?"At one game our pitcher was walking out of the dugout, and the sign fell down and knocked him out, so we do that to make sure the sign is securely in place."
If it is obvious from your point of view, please explain it. It is not obvious from mine. If we are discussing how non-religion becomes religion, I think the difference is as important as the distinction between a cell and an oily bubble is in biology.
IF it is a rational action, it is not a superstitious ritual."At one game our pitcher was walking out of the dugout, and the sign fell down and knocked him out, so we do that to make sure the sign is securely in place."
We were talking about superstitious rituals not being the same as religious rituals.
How is an irrational, isolated, meaningless ritual different?
I am positing that seemingly meaningless rituals MIGHT be a precursor to religion. Since you seem to discount that, I'd like to know your reasons.