ILX Religiosity and Spirituality and Agnosticity and Atheicity Poll

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Phil D that is a naive simplification. You act as if there were no religious people at all in blue states. 2/3 of my life within the church was within liberal churches in blue states. You can't just wish that away because it doesn't agree with your expectations.

Karen D. Tregaskin, Sunday, 19 September 2010 01:04 (fifteen years ago)

Is it possible for you to stick to one strawman at a time? Or for at least more than five minutes?

Shock and Awe High School (Phil D.), Sunday, 19 September 2010 01:06 (fifteen years ago)

I mean, the fact that there are religious people in blue states -- which, duh, and which I never questioned -- has no bearing on whether -- again! -- the experience you describe is "typical" nor whether it dominates the political/cultural narrative in the US.

Shock and Awe High School (Phil D.), Sunday, 19 September 2010 01:08 (fifteen years ago)

"was joking about football and religion btw."
I'm not! I was reading this book on hooliganism and the author described his experience as a kind of religious ecstasy he'd never felt before.
I suppose it's possible to experience the same by knitting, but that would have to be some kind of knitting!

Philip Nunez, Sunday, 19 September 2010 01:11 (fifteen years ago)

Oh-ho, knitting is my compass star and I'd never grant it that status. Far more likely to piss you off than send you into otherworldly ecstasy.

Mormons come out of the sky and they stand there (Abbbottt), Sunday, 19 September 2010 01:15 (fifteen years ago)

but this simply is not necessarily the case

Of course it isn't 'necessarily' the case, but it is often enough. I'd argue that a majority of Christian churches actually work towards that kind of brainwashing. It's built-in.

No Good, Scrunty-Looking, Narf Herder (Gukbe), Sunday, 19 September 2010 01:15 (fifteen years ago)

where's the panantheist option for us spinozian + pseudo-spinozian types?

Mordy, Sunday, 19 September 2010 01:23 (fifteen years ago)

I heard a reverend on cable access use the phrase "pantheist pussy" and the phrase has never left my mind.

Mormons come out of the sky and they stand there (Abbbottt), Sunday, 19 September 2010 01:24 (fifteen years ago)

Haha, was just reading John Cole's blog and saw this:

I don’t want to start a religious flame war, but it really says something weird about the country that in 2010, you can be a viable Senate candidate believing masturbation is evil and that gays just have a personality disorder or even admitting you’ve dabbled in the dark arts, but if you stand up and say “I’m an atheist,” you’ll just get destroyed in the election.

People believe in and do all sorts of crazy shit and get elected to higher office, but the one surefire barrier (save Pete Stark) to elected office is not believing in something. Saying “I don’t believe in the virgin birth” makes you a crazy person. It’s just weird.

Must be because of the widespread typical American Christian experience of being open, liberal and constantly questioning one's beliefs.

Shock and Awe High School (Phil D.), Sunday, 19 September 2010 01:36 (fifteen years ago)

I think this is more a function of reasonable Christianity being too polite to shout down the fundies, who are more shouty.
There was this lady who was holding the line against ID creeping into the school system in the South, and they were just savaging this woman, calling her some secular humanist devil or something, and she was a regular churchgoer, her dad was a minister.

Philip Nunez, Sunday, 19 September 2010 01:42 (fifteen years ago)

Not to mention that it isn't just a dogma issue. People who are believers tend to rate highly the importance of that belief (in terms of giving them moral/ethical/etc input). If they felt it wasn't so important, they wouldn't bother being it. So you get the kind of situation where they are okay with a lot of varied forms of religion in politics (Jewish, other Prot denominations, Catholicism, etc), but the religion needs to be present.

Mordy, Sunday, 19 September 2010 01:45 (fifteen years ago)

Uh, I think the idea that "religion is the sole source of moral behavior" is, in fact, a "dogma issue."

Shock and Awe High School (Phil D.), Sunday, 19 September 2010 01:47 (fifteen years ago)

this is more of a major psychological issue that if you live your life according to a religion, you're going to value it highly. but yes, there are dogmas that clearly indicate that belief in god is the only path to moral behavior. i'm just saying that it doesn't stem from the dogma (at least not fully) as there's plenty of dogma that is not considered particularly important (and you can believe in 'religion/god' and not follow any other dogma at all, and you won't run into the same problem as an atheist)

Mordy, Sunday, 19 September 2010 01:50 (fifteen years ago)

Not to mention that for most of those denominations, they preach in dogma that people of opposing religions don't have access to salvation/morality -- but that hasn't gotten in the way of religious voters supporting religious candidates (tho there's def been a convalescing of Judeo-Christian faiths in American life that leaves out other faiths)

Mordy, Sunday, 19 September 2010 01:55 (fifteen years ago)

(convalescing, not really the word i was looking for...)

Mordy, Sunday, 19 September 2010 01:57 (fifteen years ago)

I don't think it matters so much that you actually believe but that you are willing to put up the pretense of belief, and are therefore subordinate to the mainstream. Even GWB admitted he wasn't a literalist w/r/t the bible.

Philip Nunez, Sunday, 19 September 2010 02:00 (fifteen years ago)

something like that. also communicating the affect that surrounds religion and is so important to american public spaces/discourse. look at obama's speeches, a guy who is certainly not a particularly overt subscriber to religious dogma, but peppers his speeches with belief in god, religious sentiment, etc.

Mordy, Sunday, 19 September 2010 02:02 (fifteen years ago)

I should probably let this lie, but...

2) With regards to "proof" - this is again where Spirituality is like Justice, and not like Geology. How do you *prove* Justice? People have so many different conceptions of what Justice is, for example:
a) there is no such thing as Justice, it's the Law of the Jungle, dog eat dog
b) an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth
c) there is a social contract where we agree to give up certain rights in exchange for freedoms
d) there is a strict code as handed down by an Authority like God or Hammurabi or the Highway Code
e) it is what is decided by the consensus of the majority of one's culture and established by precedent
f) we hold these truths to be self evident, that man has certain in alienable rights blah blah blah
g) it is to be decided on an individual case by case basis and must be tempered with Mercy

^^^^^ how would you go about establishing *proof* for any of these views? And even if you could, with all of these conflicting views, how *could* proof or disproof of one affect any of the others?

So apparently you think it's impossible to have any kind of discussion about the legitimacy, coherence, or efficacy, of any of the above conceptions of justice? That their merits cannot be debated and compared? Do you think that physical tangible 'proof' is the only form of intellectual justification?

ledge, Sunday, 19 September 2010 08:13 (fifteen years ago)

beause if you don't, then don't assume that that's how i think about religion.

ledge, Sunday, 19 September 2010 08:36 (fifteen years ago)

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-shropshire-11360659 Kind of off topic, but I'm always interested in the more batshit elements of religion.

textbook blows on the head (dowd), Sunday, 19 September 2010 10:42 (fifteen years ago)

Last night i met some Swedish people who, when told I am from the states, asked me if I was Mormon! They really wanted to hear all about Mormonism! LOLz

Telephoneface (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, 19 September 2010 10:45 (fifteen years ago)

I started out as atheist (baptized by aunt/uncle, my folks never went to church tho, mom still says Xtianity is "a death cult") who would rather read & believe in ancient Greek or esp Egyptian myths and legends. In my teens was very anti-Christian (growing up alt in Bible Belt), then I got into Buddhism, then Theosophy, New Agey stuff, then Hinduism, and recently with Alan Watts' "Behold the Spirit" I'm finding tremendous value in Christianity at last. Basically I have found spirituality through reading.

It's hard to articulate what I believe, but over the years my definition of God (call Him what you will) has grown into something I can truly say I believe in.

Telephoneface (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, 19 September 2010 10:53 (fifteen years ago)

So apparently you think it's impossible to have any kind of discussion about the legitimacy, coherence, or efficacy, of any of the above conceptions of justice? That their merits cannot be debated and compared? Do you think that physical tangible 'proof' is the only form of intellectual justification?

No, dude. I'm saying that 1) even if you "debunk" or rather prove that one conception of Justice is flawed, you have *not* debunked the entire concept and 2) "proof" is a really flawed way of dealing with concepts which require individual interpretation to start with. You can debate and compare all you like, but there IS no one right conception of Justice, nor is there one of Spirituality.

Is it possible for you to stick to one strawman at a time? Or for at least more than five minutes?

I dunno, is it actually possible for you to accept that my actual experiences, no matter how "atypical" you seem to want to think they are, as *valid* as your observations and just as representative of the *actual* experience of A Religious Person as what you have observed, second hand, in others?

If I have a straw man, it's trying to figure out why *you* clearly have a lot invested in denying my experiences even exist - but that certainly seems the way that you are presenting this.

Anyway, even I'm getting bored of this thread at this point. Things like this only seem to retrench people in their already decided systems and that kinda sucks.

Karen D. Tregaskin, Sunday, 19 September 2010 12:22 (fifteen years ago)

I have not once denied that you have experienced what you've said you have. Not once. And a read back through will show that. All that I have said is that my experience of religious life in America is counter to what you seem to believe is typical, and that I don't think that American culture and politics would be what they are if what you have experienced were typical. That's it.

You appear to have a chip on your shoulder about ten miles wide about this that's causing you to think I'm saying or insinuating that you're lying about your own experiences. Sorry, but that's your hangup at work, not anything I've actually said.

(The closest thing I can think of is my insisting that your claim that only a "small group" of religious people believe in God as an actual entity can't possibly be correct. And, absent some real numbers, I'm sticking by that. But it seems a long leap from that to me "denying that your experiences are valid.")

Shock and Awe High School (Phil D.), Sunday, 19 September 2010 12:44 (fifteen years ago)

look at obama's speeches, a guy who is certainly not a particularly overt subscriber to religious dogma, but peppers his speeches with belief in god, religious sentiment, etc.

"Certainly" presumes evidence not offered, but I'll allow it. In any case, does it really matter? Continuing to play the game that way lets the dumber elements of society -- or even the smarter but more venal -- continue to aver that not only is religious the source of morality, it's the source of law. ("This is a Christian nation!") Combine that tendency with the American myths about self-reliance and Manifest Destiny, etc., and thus we find ourselves in the fucked-up position we are w/r/t reproductive rights, criminal law, immigration, health care, taxes . . . I think it becomes even more clear when, given the current landscape, when you scratch a Tea Partier you seem to find a Christian Dominionist or some similar retrograde religious freak underneath.

Shock and Awe High School (Phil D.), Sunday, 19 September 2010 12:53 (fifteen years ago)

just as representative of the *actual* experience of A Religious Person as what you have observed, second hand, in others?

And, see, now this just pisses me right the fuck off when I've told you, outright, that I have first hand experience as A (Formerly) Religious Person myself and as a family member to fundamentalist Christians and Reform Jews. (Actually, one of them is Orthodox.) (And yes, family members count as "first hand experience," clearly, if your father's experience as an atheist at Bible Study is to be counted.)

You're not arguing honestly, not even close, and you mostly just seem cheesed that there exist people who are willing to say publicly that they find something you believe to be silly. Well, not to go all Kanye here, but deal with it. Certainly there are people in the world who believe things that you find to be manifestly ridiculous, and I have no doubt you're quite willing to say so, even to their faces.

Shock and Awe High School (Phil D.), Sunday, 19 September 2010 12:59 (fifteen years ago)

In any case, does it really matter? Continuing to play the game that way lets the dumber elements of society -- or even the smarter but more venal -- continue to aver that not only is religious the source of morality, it's the source of law...

This is a silly remark, Phil. Understanding the role that religion plays in American life, and to what extent it may emerge from dogma or may be embedded in affective dialogues, etc, is not "playing the game." I don't think anyone here has argued with you that allowing religious faith to have a hegemony on political expression is probably not a great thing (or argued that it hasn't existed). So why the antagonism? No one is sitting at home thinking, "Oh hey, this Mordy guy says that all you have to do is profess some religious sentiment and you'll become more attractive to voters -- let's curtail reproductive rights some more." At the same time not paying attention to how sentiment/affect works is gonna bury anyone who is trying to make a change (and two particular examples why: 1) Progressive values in the US married to religious affect have always been more successful than progressive values that eschew religion and 2) There are probably rhetorical ways of making progressive cases for things, while even being an atheist, that might tap into a history of dialogue + religious idiom without necessarily constituting a belief in God. I'm not sure it has been uncovered yet, but it won't be until someone who is very serious and probably verbally intelligent studies how language works in politics and forms a way of tapping into that language despite being an atheist -- possibly in a similar acculturation process that occurred for Catholics, Jews, etc...)

"Certainly" presumes evidence not offered, but I'll allow it.

Uh, thanks?

If you disagree, disagree. If you agree, agree. Don't be like, "You haven't proven this case that I already agree with but that's okay I'll let it go." What exactly is the point? To show that I haven't made a compelling argument for something I posted on a message board? Generally the way these things work is that you make a remark, and if someone disagrees, then you can unpack it. When you skip the middle step you get TL;DR syndrome.

Mordy, Sunday, 19 September 2010 13:20 (fifteen years ago)

The closest thing I can think of is my insisting that your claim that only a "small group" of religious people believe in God as an actual entity can't possibly be correct

I'd like to put some pressure on this, actually. What would it mean to believe God is an actual entity? What is the opposite of that? What is an actual entity? Is the Holy Ghost an actual entity?

Mordy, Sunday, 19 September 2010 13:22 (fifteen years ago)

Phil, it seems to me like you are repeating the whole "religion is the cause of all wars / problems in the world/ problems in this country" which is as simple, reductive and just wrong as the old religious saw of "people without religion don't have morality." It's not that simple.

You seem to *want* religion to be this horrible backwards thing so that you can blame "Religion" for the problems of your country - rather than actually blaming the conditions of greed, ignorance, etc. which people have manipulated in a quest for power.

I've never denied that there *are* people who are the way you describe, just that they is not necessarily *typical* of the myriad experience of human religion, either. You aren't arguing yourself at this point, you're just stamping your feet up and down and saying that *your* experiences are "typical" and mine somehow aren't. Like I said earlier, reading comprehension is clearly not your strong point, so I just have no interest in arguing with your projection any longer. Sorry.

Karen D. Tregaskin, Sunday, 19 September 2010 13:25 (fifteen years ago)

- rather than actually blaming the conditions of greed, ignorance, etc. which people have manipulated in a quest for power.

that's a really good point. i don't think it's the content of people's beliefs which others find particularly objectionable as much as it is the background motivations

dude (del), Sunday, 19 September 2010 13:33 (fifteen years ago)

The closest thing I can think of is my insisting that your claim that only a "small group" of religious people believe in God as an actual entity can't possibly be correct

I'd like to put some pressure on this, actually. What would it mean to believe God is an actual entity? What is the opposite of that? What is an actual entity? Is the Holy Ghost an actual entity?

Maybe a personal/conscious infinite force rather than an impersonal/mechanistic force? Something with more love than a quantum void?

Telephoneface (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, 19 September 2010 13:38 (fifteen years ago)

I think the majority of American religious believers probably believe in a personal/conscious infinite force instead of a mechanistic force. Actual entity is a weird term tho, especially if you believe in an infinite God (one that necessarily exists above time/reality/language). If it's just about being personal v. being mechanistic, I'd def agree with Phil that is the predominant strain of religious belief.

Mordy, Sunday, 19 September 2010 13:50 (fifteen years ago)

If you disagree, disagree. If you agree, agree. Don't be like, "You haven't proven this case that I already agree with but that's okay I'll let it go." What exactly is the point? To show that I haven't made a compelling argument for something I posted on a message board?

Lighten up, Francis. It's called "one (1) joke."

Shock and Awe High School (Phil D.), Sunday, 19 September 2010 13:52 (fifteen years ago)

that's a really good point. i don't think it's the content of people's beliefs which others find particularly objectionable as much as it is the background motivations

This was certainly the take-home message that I got from Altemeyer's book.

That there is in any society, a core group of right wing authoritarians who are very literal minded, and will follow a leader blindly because that is their personality type. This is not the problem IN ITSELF - the problem is when you combine this group with a high social dominant leader type who wants power at any cost and will lie and manipulate that group for his/her own ends.

Even if you COULD just flip a switch and make those right wing authoritarians stop believing in god, you would *not* get nice, freethinking liberals. You would get a bunch of right wing authoritarian super-dogmatic ATHEISTS instead.

My other point is that although this is a core group within religion, it is *not* the only group and it is *not* necessarily "typical" of the human religious experience.

Karen D. Tregaskin, Sunday, 19 September 2010 13:54 (fifteen years ago)

what a poorly formed joke, dude xp

Mordy, Sunday, 19 September 2010 13:55 (fifteen years ago)

Phil, it seems to me like you are repeating the whole "religion is the cause of all wars / problems in the world/ problems in this country" which is as simple, reductive and just wrong as the old religious saw of "people without religion don't have morality." It's not that simple.

I quite clearly did not say any of those things, nor did I even imply them.

You aren't arguing yourself at this point, you're just stamping your feet up and down and saying that *your* experiences are "typical" and mine somehow aren't.

I quite clearly did not say that, either. Nowhere did I say my experiences are "typical," nor would I ever say that. I never said anything close to that. If I did, then I misspoke, but I didn't, and you can't point to a single post of mine that claims my experiences are "typical." In fact, I challenge you to do so. What I have said is that I do not believe your experience is "typical." That does not imply that I believe mine are -- you're jumping over umpteen million steps there just so you can get all offended and cheesed off.

Like I said earlier, reading comprehension is clearly not your strong point,

I'll take this criticism from someone who can demonstrate that he or she is capable of not putting words in my mouth, even once. I'll note that, rather than attempt to suss out my position by asking questions ("DON'T YOU BELIEVE IN LOVE AND ART AND JUSTICE!!!!???!!!" doesn't count as a real question), you have simply resorted, again and again and again and again, to preposterous caricatures of what I've actually said, then gotten all shirty with me about it. At this point I have to believe that you're pathologically incapable of talking to people without lying about what they're saying.

Mordy: If it's just about being personal v. being mechanistic, I'd def agree with Phil that is the predominant strain of religious belief.

YES. Thank you.

what a poorly formed joke, dude xp

You've never seen a sitcom with a ridiculous courtroom scene, I guess? w/e

Shock and Awe High School (Phil D.), Sunday, 19 September 2010 14:02 (fifteen years ago)

Actual entity is a weird term tho, especially if you believe in an infinite God (one that necessarily exists above time/reality/language).

i tend to agree with those schools of indian philosophy that say that there are no "actual entities" to be found anywhere

dude (del), Sunday, 19 September 2010 14:04 (fifteen years ago)

If it's just about being personal v. being mechanistic, I'd def agree with Phil that is the predominant strain of religious belief.

That said, I'd like to hear from Karen disagreeing with this -- it seems like a really hard thing to disagree with, so I imagine Karen thinks the argument is really about something else. It could be one of those things where you two are talking past each other.

Mordy, Sunday, 19 September 2010 14:05 (fifteen years ago)

Although, still, Mordy, certainly Christian believers, as a matter of dogma if not of actual practice, tend to believe in Jesus Christ as an actual, individual person as we think of ourselves as individual persons; and as a distinct and individual member of the Trinity. A real boy, as it were. Not something vague and indefinable, but as a person that they'd know on the street if they saw him.

Shock and Awe High School (Phil D.), Sunday, 19 September 2010 14:07 (fifteen years ago)

Yes, but neither all of Christianity, let alone all of American religion, believes in the Trinity. On top of that -- belief in the trinity may include an actual human being, but only as piece of a larger divine body that includes incorporeal parts. The great novelty of Jesus in Catholic doctrine was that this infinity could be captured in a human body -- I don't think that should then go back and color the entire history of dogma.

Mordy, Sunday, 19 September 2010 14:09 (fifteen years ago)

Nor am I claiming it should. Again, it's getting at this "small group of believers" stuff.

Shock and Awe High School (Phil D.), Sunday, 19 September 2010 14:11 (fifteen years ago)

Having taught philosophy of religion for several years now at a large public university in a red US state, I've found that my students rarely have any clear idea of what they believe re. religion, even if they're active-ish in churches. We spend lots of time trying to get clearer on such matters, but it's evident that this clarity isn't particularly important for what religion does for them in their lives, which is give them an identity & a vague sense that they live an orderly life.

Euler, Sunday, 19 September 2010 14:14 (fifteen years ago)

At this point I have to believe that you're pathologically incapable of talking to people without lying about what they're saying.

s/"people"/"me
s/"they're"/"I'm"

Shock and Awe High School (Phil D.), Sunday, 19 September 2010 14:14 (fifteen years ago)

it's evident that this clarity isn't particularly important for what religion does for them in their lives, which is give them an identity & a vague sense that they live an orderly life

^ most otm thing in this and all associated debates

Ismael Klata, Sunday, 19 September 2010 14:23 (fifteen years ago)

^ most otm thing in this and all associated debates

YES!

dude (del), Sunday, 19 September 2010 14:26 (fifteen years ago)

i think exoteric religious traditions give one a sense of identity and tend to reify god

esoteric traditions are more about ruthlessly deconstructing one's sense of identity

i don't think either way is necessarily superior. you can be the most tradded-out religioner and still get to shake hands w/god or whatever

god just the aliens cultivating us anyhow, no?

dude (del), Sunday, 19 September 2010 14:30 (fifteen years ago)

sad that the west has no present-day shamanic tradition

you get people in charismatic pentacostal churches in throes of ecstasy, but i don't know if that's a healthy framework for engaging with the subtle body

dude (del), Sunday, 19 September 2010 14:34 (fifteen years ago)

You seem to *want* religion to be this horrible backwards thing so that you can blame "Religion" for the problems of your country - rather than actually blaming the conditions of greed, ignorance, etc. which people have manipulated in a quest for power.

I don't think this two things are as separate as that. Christianity has succeeded in the western world because of political expediency and its huge adaptability. Christian thought from the 6th century is very different from today's. This is a particular problem in America. The need for universal healthcare (not in any specific form, but rather just the 'concept') is something that would be morally correct if you read the Bible, but the current state of a lot of American Christianity believes the exact opposite. I think it's funny that many American Christians find Mormonism to be strange and even evil when it seems to be just to be the logical extension of American Christian thought. It's true that if you take religion out of the equation you won't get a bunch of free-thinking liberals, but taking away the supernatural justification/rationalization for so much odious behaviour couldn't hurt. The dangerous x factor in religion is that notion that a higher being/calling supersedes all worldly notions and conceptions of morality.

Yes, but neither all of Christianity, let alone all of American religion, believes in the Trinity.

RIP Arians. Missin u guys. <3

No Good, Scrunty-Looking, Narf Herder (Gukbe), Sunday, 19 September 2010 15:10 (fifteen years ago)

now, plz don't take this as me being a dick BUT...

a lot of the talk on this thread relates to people's personal experiences or feelings. but how does that have anything to do with whether a god exists or whether religion is a good thing for people as a whole? why do these experiences necessarily have to be tied up with any one particular set of beliefs? i've have some amazing, life changing experiences that you might call "mystical" or "spiritual", but i'd never try to explain them in terms of organised religion (or for that matter, psychology/neuroscience). is there a point where you think "well, this makes me feel better, i'm not gonna analyse it too much."

max arrrrrgh, Sunday, 19 September 2010 15:15 (fifteen years ago)

tradition?

some people need context to frame their experiences. i guess you don't, which is great. personally, i feel weird being in an empty sterile room sans window dressing, props, etc. like, i recognize that much of it may be bullshit, but it helps me navigate the world. to my mind most things in this life are built on flimsy ideas, anyhow. why should responses to the big questions be any different?

dude (del), Sunday, 19 September 2010 15:21 (fifteen years ago)


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