I seriously don't see any difference between raising your kids to fear imaginary deity and raising your kids to be law-abiding passive consumers tbh and think in many respects the former is preferable

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The French

Because instilling your seeds with a healthy respect for a status quo that's undeniably destroying the world is worse than encouraging them to be nice to other people so the big invisible punishment pixie doesn't get all smitey on their asses.

I mean I dunno there are shades and shades and shades and shades here, but no challop I wd rather be a monk than a stockbroker.

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:09 (sixteen years ago)

i wholeheartedly agree with this tbh

plaxico (I know, right?), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:11 (sixteen years ago)

this is commendably ridiculous

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:16 (sixteen years ago)

at least good consumers contribute to society, y'know?

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:16 (sixteen years ago)

to a fucked society? good work, fellas.

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:17 (sixteen years ago)

the religious just instigate smiting/hang around waiting for the smiting to start

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:17 (sixteen years ago)

consumerist literature pushed through my letterbox might conceivably be of some use to me, as might some of the produce of a consumerist society.

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:18 (sixteen years ago)

people will always needs basic goods, they'll hopefully grow out of the need for magic

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:18 (sixteen years ago)

I should've called this Monk vs Stockbroker. I like that Ezra Pound devotes a chunk of The Cantos to hating on both, he is probly right on this score except for the whole anti-semitic right wing nutjob unfortunateness.

Still, the idea of "contributing" is an intriguing one that needs a proper dissection while we contribute to The Culture.

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:19 (sixteen years ago)

the gradual erosion of the need for magic will hopefully lead to a societal norm where humans act like maybe they have some responsibility/say in where things are headed, or help to focus otherwise distracted/misplaced attention in this direction

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:20 (sixteen years ago)

wars are fought over religion and political ideology- at least with political ideology wars there's a chance that the winner was right

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:21 (sixteen years ago)

Does the idea of monkdom/hermitage contribute something to the world for starters? Paradigm of simple life? Good works etc? I mean a lot of Western monks used to do farming/caring for sick/preserving Classical literature etc etc. I think some monks still do good for other people now. Problem with my argument is obv that doing good is really the same as other means of preserving the status quo but still

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:22 (sixteen years ago)

At least as fucked as society is there's no chance that any religions have contributed in any way to that fuckedness. I mean the Catholic Church eg has done nothing but good for the world amirite?

what of the fuck you talkie bout (Pancakes Hackman), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:24 (sixteen years ago)

I completely agree that religion is at best some training wheels long overdue for discarding btw, that isn't my beef. I wd prefer people to be clear-sighted logical materialists striving to bring on the Uebermensch but y'know I've met a lot of people and let's not get carried away here.

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:25 (sixteen years ago)

And we have plenty of lol Dawkins threads so let's try to steer this in a slightly different direction which is more "is raising children in a moderate benevolent religion any worse than raising them in a moderate benevolent capitalism?"

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:26 (sixteen years ago)

Idealised examples of a better way of doing things can be produced for almost any rhetoric though? If only everyone acted rationally then perfect capitalism would work etc

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:27 (sixteen years ago)

oops xp

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:27 (sixteen years ago)

both are horrible and stupid. only one is bad parenting tho, the other is just delusional parenting.

dumb mack maine follows (a hoy hoy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:28 (sixteen years ago)

which is which?

and why is 'raising your kids to be law-abiding passive consumers' either?

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:29 (sixteen years ago)

the only objectionable word is 'passive' and fuck that being more damaging to the individual or society than an unquestionable omnipotent fairytale

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:30 (sixteen years ago)

I think this is a failing of many militant atheists tho. It's a bit like those Rogan Taylor-y football guys who don't seem to have beef with any of the workings of society outside of football, but think somehow football can exist as some kind of mung bean commune inside the big nasty real world. Plenty atheists seem to think that religion is this separate oddity outside of the societies that shape it and those societies wd be more or less peachy if the religion bit just disappeared? People need magical hope because the world is shit and scary, surely?

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:31 (sixteen years ago)

xpost

Y'know I was v. unhappy with the word "passive" from the beginning and I don't know if I kept it for rhetorical fannydangle or cos I wanted to get at the idea of "actively supporting the status quo".

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:32 (sixteen years ago)

can't we trust people to work without religion, and without becoming textbook automatons? obviously.

what's the reciprocal question? 'can't we trust passively raised consumers to.....what?'

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:32 (sixteen years ago)

People need magical hope because the world is shit and scary, surely?

people need truth because the world is shit and scary, as plainly presented and accurate as it can be found.

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:33 (sixteen years ago)

truth isn't consumerism, and it isn't communion, but which would we come up with in the morning having been reset to original settings?

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:34 (sixteen years ago)

something about trusting passively raised consumers to go "hang on this alternately groovy/unbearably mundane lifestyle is unsustainable plus I am fucking over swathes of people to live it maybe some serious change might be in order"

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:35 (sixteen years ago)

eh with benefit of 2000 years of accumulated observed science that is.

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:35 (sixteen years ago)

I agree with the OP's premise. Children need metaphors. A bit of lite Anglicanism is a decent way to persuade them that there is more to life than cash. Plus, later on, it gives them enough cultural heritage that they can feel warm and fuzzy and nostalgic while slightly drunk at midnight mass on Christmas Eve.

Roman Coin, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:36 (sixteen years ago)

religion can give people big picture thoughts which I think are necessary and religion is maybe more likely to induce those thoughts than the straw man happy shopper I'm weaving?

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:36 (sixteen years ago)

that was sort of to darragh but I basically agreed with mr Coin there.

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:36 (sixteen years ago)

People who are certain are dangerous. This applies to both ends of the spectrum. Cheerful agnosticism is this country's greatest invention, after queuing and pubs.

Roman Coin, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:41 (sixteen years ago)

I dunno, my tolerance doesn't really extend to saying "hey, we've all got a point" so much as defending people's right to be wrong about stuff that doesn't matter much.

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:42 (sixteen years ago)

the only thing is that growing up in an overwhelmingly catholic atmosphere pretty much demonstrates the these two things are NOT mutually exclusive

plaxico (I know, right?), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:43 (sixteen years ago)

I'm sure they dance hand in hand a lot. I'm reading Baltasar and Blimunda at the moment which is about lol 18th century Portugal and Saramago does a good job of reminding you how the Church used to be the brainwashing arm of the State. "Used to be" I guess.

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:45 (sixteen years ago)

capitalist economics is today's theology, innit.

FC Tom Tomsk Club (Merdeyeux), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:45 (sixteen years ago)

being passive gonna make ppl vote for mr. nicey 'dave' cameron instead of having opinions that clarkson didn't tell them- thats what that word in this context means to me anyway.

dumb mack maine follows (a hoy hoy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:46 (sixteen years ago)

xpost

I think it sort of is, tho it probably always has been as long as it's existed. French revolutionaries mostly good atheists and a lot of the US revolutionaries pretty much Deists in disguise. I know this is no duh but it does make the war vs Jesus more complicated than progressives vs reactionaries.

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:48 (sixteen years ago)

Sorry let's be honest mostly this is the war vs Allah cos he naughty God whereas Jesus mostly funny/cuddly.

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:49 (sixteen years ago)

Martin Amis not dropping any "compulsory internment for all Women's Institute members" essays any time soon.

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:50 (sixteen years ago)

6 billion and rising answers to yr point about 'everyone should get enough to get along' NV

multiple xposts due to work fubar

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:59 (sixteen years ago)

I mean if your beef is w/passive consumerism + capitalist theology, I hardly think that religious acculturation is the road to questioning authority. Except for maybe Jesuits and lapsed Catholics, challenging God is seen as kind of a bad thing.

what of the fuck you talkie bout (Pancakes Hackman), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 12:59 (sixteen years ago)

passive my arse. i'm an active consumer.

free the charmless but occasionally brilliant Dom Passantino (history mayne), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:00 (sixteen years ago)

PROTESTANT <--- the clue is in the name

Karen Tregaskin, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:00 (sixteen years ago)

TS: Being one of the flock vs. being one of the sheeple

We should have called Suzie and Bobby (NickB), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:01 (sixteen years ago)

Children need metaphors

metaphors = easy lies

better to live an easy/happy life based on a big lie or a hard/unhappy life based on a thousand small and nasty truths?

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:02 (sixteen years ago)

i mean, tbh when someone starts throwing 'mataphors' i find it hard to read it as anything other than 'i don't consider you capable of dealing with the facts'

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:04 (sixteen years ago)

'mataphors' = bullshitfighters i dunno

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:04 (sixteen years ago)

Difference in outcome more or less negligible.

Only seen the first Matrix but there is yr classic example of not really selling the small nasty truths world as being better than the big lie.

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:04 (sixteen years ago)

Fuck it. Religion is a negative on the brain, I don't doubt that overall. But as it exists for lots of its adherents its not a bigger brain-negative than all the other bollocksy ideas people carry around and I still think it's less of a brain-negative in its philosophical possibilities than the leading brand of brain detergent.

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:07 (sixteen years ago)

yes and the only reason people need metaphors is because they are STUPID and cannot "HANDLE FACTS" not because different people think differently and some people think in black and white facts and some people think in symbols and significators

the way you think is a one size fits all approach that works for EVERYONE yes omg i am bowled over by your superior logic

Karen Tregaskin, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:08 (sixteen years ago)

for a self-confessed bonghead you get v. testy v. quickly dude

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:09 (sixteen years ago)

i do not recommend and can't condone growing up fearing an imaginary deity despite acknowledging how effective it was wrt instilling discipline and respect (yeah but so does military school etc.)

mdskltr (blueski), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:10 (sixteen years ago)

ILX is a lot like sitting on top of a pillar in the desert, really.

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:13 (sixteen years ago)

Sighing waiting endlessly to be dragged off to nightclub by Silvia Pinal.

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:14 (sixteen years ago)

Darragh~ if you don't use metaphors to deal with systems beyond your understanding then I'm assuming your inputting you're comments directly into your computer with 0s and 1s, rather than using an OS based on a pretend desktop, yes?

Toddlers aren't great at understanding why sharing things is ultimately of mutual benefit to the community, so they need metaphors.

Roman Coin, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:15 (sixteen years ago)

woops~ 'your' and 'you're' the wrong way round~ pleasedon'tkillme

Roman Coin, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:16 (sixteen years ago)

My local CofE village church organises the delivery of roast dinners to old people on Sundays, raises funds for disaster appeals, provides the means for people to meet other people who otherwise would not, has initiated a scheme to turn local wasteland into allotments, organises daytrips for the elderly and serves as a social hub for a whole village. They're providing tangible benefit to the immediate community and they couldn't give a monkeys if you believe in God to be honest. I don't see what is wrong with this.

Roman Coin, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:17 (sixteen years ago)

Obv nothing other than we should be able to do all those things without religious context, agenda or motivation beyond just helping others.

mdskltr (blueski), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:19 (sixteen years ago)

religion can give people big picture thoughts which I think are necessary

I think this is significant. It creates a space where leaders can emerge and I can't think of any leaders I like who have grown out of a free-market or logical materialist background, mostly because religion is a collective/communitarian pursuit in a way the others aren't, and that's the salient feature here I think.

ogmor, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:22 (sixteen years ago)

I think there's a potential for religious beliefs to be a) liberal and questioning, and b) oppositional to the worst excesses of free market fuckwittery. Obviously in many many cases those beliefs are neither but hey a bit of being Don Quixote is nicer than a bit of being that dude out of Hard Times who wants facts.

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:22 (sixteen years ago)

was that the eminently practical gradgrind?

ogmor, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:25 (sixteen years ago)

Really disappointed to click on this thread and find no arse on it.

kingkongvsgodzilla, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:26 (sixteen years ago)

What the hell, NV?

kingkongvsgodzilla, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:27 (sixteen years ago)

xxpost

yeah, you can tell he's a goodie from the surname.

I bust the windows out your carp (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:27 (sixteen years ago)

'we should be able to do all those things without religious context, agenda or motivation beyond just helping others.'

we ARE able to, but there shouldn't be a stigma for doing them IN a religious context. It's a baby/bathwater sitch~ some people do these things because of jesus, some because they want to help out and they can get with the jesus stuff if need be. I help out with these things but I only go to church at Christmas (because I like carols). Some people believe in God and get together and feel good about it and do good stuff as a result. Good stuff is good, regardless of belief.

Roman Coin, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:30 (sixteen years ago)

PROTESTANT <------ only protesting those corrupt Papists imo. Suggesting otherwise is kind of like asserting that Wee Frees are liberated because there's 'free' in the name.

'Metaphor' is 'bus' in Greek - and they're also for the smarter person who likes to make an allusive point. There's a lot of room on that bus.

WRT religion and its practice in the public sphere, I have no objections that cannot be covered by satire. If people live nonviolently according to the tenets of a belief system I am pretty much OK with that, and I'm interested on a history/myth level. However I cannot stand it when followers of a religion want Special Rules ie. Muslim leaders going apeshit about political satire of their beliefs when all other religions are also subject to the same jaundiced eye and somehow it doesn't prompt butthurt death threats. I have no religious beliefs but if the religious want to attest to their god being vast, then said god is probably big enough to take a bit of criticism and their supplicant is cordially invited to grow a pair. Also, I'm fond of telling any person of faith that tries to guilt trip me citing their god that they are being very blasphemous indeed.

gnothi sautée (suzy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:31 (sixteen years ago)

I agree but getting in people's faces about their god being rubbish can often be a dick move imo

with a bad girl's enlightenment and a Buddha's passion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:33 (sixteen years ago)

i never actually meet religious people or at least talk to them about it. do they even exist?

mdskltr (blueski), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:34 (sixteen years ago)

I have good convo with a basically sweet and lovely but unfortunately cursed with a touch of evangelism guy at work.

with a bad girl's enlightenment and a Buddha's passion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:35 (sixteen years ago)

I can't really think of any secular equivalents to churches or similar. I don't think you can have copycat institutions with the religion sucked out. All the secular efforts I can think of are much more dispersed and invidualist, I'm not sure you can get the same sort community (the key thing) in a secular context.

ogmor, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:36 (sixteen years ago)

I guess a lot of the secular equivalents are more state/local government funded things and I've met some prize dicks doing good deeds in those places too. Also there are plenty of adventure playgrounds and other kids resources type places that operate as secular charities.

with a bad girl's enlightenment and a Buddha's passion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:39 (sixteen years ago)

Oh yeah, also there are charities.

with a bad girl's enlightenment and a Buddha's passion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:39 (sixteen years ago)

I don't think they're the same. The relationship between the members to the institution and to wider society seems different. On my anthropological tip, I think religions are so widespread/universal because having some kind of vague centre and focus has real utility.

ogmor, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:40 (sixteen years ago)

Maybe big national charities are different but don't forget that the bulk of charities are little local amateurish things. Obviously there's a big difference in that the members aren't necessarily there to share their commitment to a god but I don't think they feel very different to local church groups I've known. Churches and charities obviously share a bunch of members too. But a look around the Councils for Voluntary Service Network website shows you that there are plenty of secular groups out there.

with a bad girl's enlightenment and a Buddha's passion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:44 (sixteen years ago)

i agree really but like i say we should be able to do it without that and this amounts to one of the bigger challenges for the secular xp

mdskltr (blueski), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:44 (sixteen years ago)

In the same way I believe that the narrative structure alludes to sex (acts, climax, denoument) I've always believed religions are just a structural model for the way human beings organize authority - it acclimatizes people to the belief that there is a boss they can't get to so they don't notice that so much in life.

I would never, unbidden, confront someone about their religion's idiocy. The scenario I suggest can't happen unless the religious person is being a dick about us godless heathens.

gnothi sautée (suzy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:45 (sixteen years ago)

There are plenty of collective-driven community projects here. It's just a case of people organising themselves and that's something that we've become bad at for whatever reason.

We should have called Suzie and Bobby (NickB), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:46 (sixteen years ago)

I wasn't saying you wd do that suzy, I was thinking of something like the Jyllands-Posten cartoons.

with a bad girl's enlightenment and a Buddha's passion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:48 (sixteen years ago)

I can't really think of any secular equivalents to churches or similar.

The WI? The Round Table?

take me to your lemur (ledge), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:49 (sixteen years ago)

WI isn't secular? Not sure about the Round Table.

with a bad girl's enlightenment and a Buddha's passion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:49 (sixteen years ago)

Oh maybe the WI is secular. I thought they had links to the C of E but maybe "Jerusalem" threw me off.

with a bad girl's enlightenment and a Buddha's passion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:50 (sixteen years ago)

"One of their features was an independence from political parties or institutions, or church or chapel"

take me to your lemur (ledge), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:51 (sixteen years ago)

"The first Women's Institute (WI) in Britain was founded in Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch"

take me to your lemur (ledge), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:52 (sixteen years ago)

see that's got a church in the name

with a bad girl's enlightenment and a Buddha's passion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:52 (sixteen years ago)

Stick that on yer jam jar.

We should have called Suzie and Bobby (NickB), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:54 (sixteen years ago)

I really don't think any of these examples are communities in the way that churches are, religious groups have lots of members who don't participate, just being there is part of it. If kids and the retired hung out to snack and ask about each other at local charities it might be different but there's value in those things. The way people look at each other in church is different and important.

I kind to have an effective version of what I'm mentioning, you need the sort of shared experience/practise that basically define religion. For most of history/in most parts of the world, I think that's effectively what religious institutions have been.

ogmor, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:55 (sixteen years ago)

since posing nude for calendars the church severed all ties xp

mdskltr (blueski), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:55 (sixteen years ago)

But secular groups clearly can do good works, and people can get a sense of community from non-religious institutions, e.g. school, work - what additional value is it that churches provide?

take me to your lemur (ledge), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 13:59 (sixteen years ago)

people find it hard to deal with death + meaninglessness. there you go.

free the charmless but occasionally brilliant Dom Passantino (history mayne), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:03 (sixteen years ago)

i don't think we'll ever lose the mystical/religious impulse, ever ever ever.

free the charmless but occasionally brilliant Dom Passantino (history mayne), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:04 (sixteen years ago)

"what additional value is it that churches provide?"

http://www.hatingitmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/10/gw-2310-school-girl-outfit.jpg

scott seward, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:06 (sixteen years ago)

I suspect you're right. And I'm ok with that. Would be nice if we could lose the violent/tribal impulse though. xp...

take me to your lemur (ledge), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:07 (sixteen years ago)

I am the puppet master. I manipulate many of the characters and events you will see. But *I* am invented, too, for your entertainment - and amusement. And you, poor creatures, who conjured *you* out of the clay? Is God in show business too?

free the charmless but occasionally brilliant Dom Passantino (history mayne), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:09 (sixteen years ago)

i don't think we'll ever lose the mystical/religious impulse, ever ever ever.

Yes, but I don't think the feeling of reverence for nature, or one's wonder at the vastness of the cosmos, or whatever else it is that triggers that impulse needs to have an organised church to adhere to. The terror of death bit is a distinct other thing, and maybe we kinda like it if someone in authority tells us that it's really nothing to be worried about.

We should have called Suzie and Bobby (NickB), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:16 (sixteen years ago)

(Religion) creates a space where leaders can emerge

This is sort of disturbingly value-neutral. You need to ask just where leaders intend to lead you, after all.

what of the fuck you talkie bout (Pancakes Hackman), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:16 (sixteen years ago)

The most succinct way I have to convey my feelings is to say that 6000 years ago humans invented monotheism and the deities to match.

gnothi sautée (suzy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:18 (sixteen years ago)

Despite all my ambiguous feelings about religion I can't help but feel it's the more human of the two options -- and that believing in god(s) speaks to something that stretches back throughout human history, and probably is an essential part of our chemical/biological breakdown. Consumerism by contrast reeks of deadening modernism being alienating and totally eliminating whatever makes us feel human. Which is to say that I prefer all the terrible things that religion does (that knee-jerk tribalism, that fear of the world) to the totally inhumane emptiness that consumerism brings.

Of course, it's a false dichotomy, right? Because religion as a medium is almost always in dialogue with things like economics/politics/social movements, and consumerism in the United States is closely linked to religion in the US, just look at Joel Osteen and dudes like that. It's not an either/or choice, it's generally a "both," and that's probably the worst -- the tribalism of religion married to the soul-deadening emptiness of consumerism.

Mordy, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:19 (sixteen years ago)

some xposts
"Leader" is neutral but no more disturbing than the idea of knives. What are they going to cut, anyway? If there were no knives/leaders I would be sad.

more xposts
School or work are very functional, the community isn't the same and it isn't the point as it is in a church. The way people interact, the way leaders emerge, the way collective action is taken and the way the members are defined by the group are very different in religious institutions. Uniting yr charity and community affects how both those things work. This was on my mind so I'll use it as an example; Obama isn't a zealot, I don't think he's succumbed to "the mystical impulse", but he's a church person, he talks like one, the way he views&deals w/people is distinctive, he wouldn't have the same approach if he'd just come up through charities or secular groups.

ogmor, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:20 (sixteen years ago)

I mean if your beef is w/passive consumerism + capitalist theology, I hardly think that religious acculturation is the road to questioning authority. Except for maybe Jesuits and lapsed Catholics, challenging God is seen as kind of a bad thing.

I was raised Catholic and this is not what I was taught. For one thing, it is not in the Bible and even Christ wrestled with his "father". I was told outright that it was okay to wonder how and why God tolerated abuse and cruelty against others and that this was normal. What I find annoying are (some) authorities in the church who give you some long, boring reason why God allows suffering, it makes no sense to me. However I do find that private practice of spiritual beliefs can instill a strong sense of independence in what is a very materialistic, competitive and sometimes downright coercive society (U.S.).

US EEL (u s steel), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:24 (sixteen years ago)

suzy, you have an interesting point re: religion and authority; but then what about the whole Protestant movement attempting to circumvent church mediation to forge a direct connection to God (although as this all hinges on faith/accepting Jesus as yr personal savior, it arguably just becomes 'mediated' in a different way)?

LRN, which helps companies build ethical cultures (bernard snowy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:24 (sixteen years ago)

There's definitely a long tradition of challenging/questioning God, even if that doesn't emerge in every era/incarnation of religion. In the Talmud Choni haMagol draws a circle around himself and defiantly refuses to leave it until God brings rain, and in the contemporary era the Lubavitcher Rebbe said that humans must demand that God bring the Messiah and question Him pointedly and ask why He has not yet brought him, because it's something that boggles the mind.

Mordy, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:26 (sixteen years ago)

multiplexposts: Mordy you're 100% OffTM, the problem with 'consumerism' isn't some sort of mystical hogwash about its soul-deadening emptiness (FYI, this is basically religious imagery), the problem is it perpetuates global systems of violent inequality

LRN, which helps companies build ethical cultures (bernard snowy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:29 (sixteen years ago)

i like ogmor's knife metaphor

yes humans invented religion and politics and philosophy and the lot of it. doesn't mean we should throw it all out. humans also invented clothes and agriculture and stainless steel and a whole lot of other things i wouldn't like to live without

Karen Tregaskin, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:29 (sixteen years ago)

XP to bernard snowy, if you're suggesting that Marxism has strong foundations in religious faith (something I won't contest, clearly post-history emerges from messianic religious ideology) that's one thing, but if you think that alienation is a religious concept only, you're totally off-base

Mordy, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:31 (sixteen years ago)

basically consumerism is the new naive materialism, in the sense of unquestioning acceptance of a dazzling world of immediate stimuli and sensations, coupled with a strong knee-jerk bad-faith resistance to anything which threatens its pleasurable subjection to the reign of those stimuli

LRN, which helps companies build ethical cultures (bernard snowy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:32 (sixteen years ago)

the problem with 'consumerism' isn't some sort of mystical hogwash about its soul-deadening emptiness (FYI, this is basically religious imagery), the problem is it perpetuates global systems of violent inequality

― LRN, which helps companies build ethical cultures (bernard snowy), Wednesday, January 27, 2010 2:29 PM (6 minutes ago) Bookmark

could be both, innit. you can have (and indeed did have) (and do have) terrible violent inequality without consumerism.

free the charmless but occasionally brilliant Dom Passantino (history mayne), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:37 (sixteen years ago)

In my experience consumerism is a reaction to feeling alienated by Capitalism.

Mordy, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:38 (sixteen years ago)

I liked Mordy's contribution upthread. Going to school from K-12 with smart Jewish kids showed me the cultural benefits of growing up in a faith where questioning authority/order is implicit; it also gave me a dim view of those whose beliefs were more rigid/couldn't 'take' questioning. REPEAT: if something is strong it can wear all the repeated questioning.

INTERESTING, HMMMM: ever since I was old enough to object to religion, the Abrahamic concept of original sin makes me think that any woman who is devout within its three religions has a whopper of a case of Stockholm syndrome.

gnothi sautée (suzy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:39 (sixteen years ago)

I think explanations of how the free-market creates inequality and talk of alienation do go together.

Definitely traditions of doubt in lots of religions. I think looking inside & explaining religion in terms of personal impulses or biological make-up gives you a very incomplete view. Although there is a long history of religious dudes cutting themselves off to go inside and find God or whatever, most religious practise has come about through social interaction. I still think religion is a social phenomenon first, built on community and shared conventions, and I see the ultra-personal form of religion post-Luther or whatever as being almost a form of proto-atheism anyway.

ogmor, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:40 (sixteen years ago)

hey I don't actually have anything to say as I haven't read it but if you're into the mystical hogwash side of capitalism / consumerism then I hear that this book: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Theology-Money-Philip-Goodchild/dp/0334041422/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1264603068&sr=8-1 is good stuff.

FC Tom Tomsk Club (Merdeyeux), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:40 (sixteen years ago)

Original Sin, unless you're using it in a way I'm not familiar with, isn't present in Islam or Judaism. Just in Christianity. xp2 suzy

Mordy, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:41 (sixteen years ago)

Obviously even in christianity ppl pick and choose w/the bible/christian tradition all the time, and original sin is a deserved asthmatic fat kid lots of ppl don't want on their team.

ogmor, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:43 (sixteen years ago)

suzy maybe talkin' more about the fall I'm guessing?

LRN, which helps companies build ethical cultures (bernard snowy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:43 (sixteen years ago)

Yeah again I think there are plenty of churches you could go to for a decade and it'd never come up.

ogmor, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:48 (sixteen years ago)

Ognor, you could attend Christian Science churches for 20 years before you needed a blood transfusion. Somehow female subjugation comes up, either in lesson or as a subliminal. I'm not down with using either original sin or fall myths as a go-to for why women 'deserve' to be subjugated by men (usually when 'because I said so' fails).

gnothi sautée (suzy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:51 (sixteen years ago)

i'm sure this thread is FULLA enlightenment but wtf @ bringing kid-raising into it, let them color and play in sandboxes and shit

k3vin k., Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:51 (sixteen years ago)

and not worry about them learning right from wrong?

mdskltr (blueski), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:52 (sixteen years ago)

it wuz a passing comment on another thread that darragh suggested we take out for a run round, also it made a change from "False Consciousness: C/D?"

with a bad girl's enlightenment and a Buddha's passion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:53 (sixteen years ago)

Yeah again I think there are plenty of churches you could go to for a decade and it'd never come up.

― ogmor, Wednesday, January 27, 2010 2:48 PM (3 minutes ago) Bookmark


mainstream protestant churches these days? sure, maybe, but the kids are probably still learning about it at vacation bible school or w/e
xpost suzy kinda beat me to it, but yeah

LRN, which helps companies build ethical cultures (bernard snowy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:54 (sixteen years ago)

Somehow female subjugation comes up, either in lesson or as a subliminal.

Again tho, this happens plenty outside of monotheism plus I strongly doubt that religion itself wd transform an otherwise liberal and decent guy into a jerkwad - jerkwads tend to bring their jerkwaddery to the party imo

with a bad girl's enlightenment and a Buddha's passion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:55 (sixteen years ago)

Even if I thought some things were essential to Christianity, female subjugation wouldn't be one of them, even tho its track record is awful. I have never heard of vacation bible school and suspect the same is true of lots of ppl. Anyway gotta leave you ppl to it.

ogmor, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 14:57 (sixteen years ago)

I think a lot of you would dig The Evolution of God

The book is essentially about how "facts on the ground" tend to dictate the principles and theologies of religion -- for instance "loving your brother" emerging as a response to trade conditions, or monotheism as a feature of isolationism.

Mordy, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:00 (sixteen years ago)

Noodles, the jerkwaddery happens because our culture has been constructed around the premise of male primacy for 6000 years. That comes with entitlement issues that just plain would not occur in a world that did not bust out the ultimate dick move of claiming an offstage deity said man was the boss of woman.

Mordy, monotheism seems to have become more accessible as an idea because of the evolving ability to comprehend abstract notions past myth or metaphor; also humanity learned to better control its surroundings compared to times where polyteism prevailed. You went from this poly situation where the divine is in everything, to a mono situation where it is distinct and outside, with a fun interim where religion = soap opera of the pantheon.

gnothi sautée (suzy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:06 (sixteen years ago)

that book looks cool, Mordy. I've been reading Alain Badiou's book on St. Paul, which very very briefly touches on some of the political maneuvering in the early centuries of the Christian Church leading up to the consolidation of the Gospels, and it's been totally fascinating for me, Mr. Lifelong Atheist Hardman.

LRN, which helps companies build ethical cultures (bernard snowy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:07 (sixteen years ago)

so suzy, acc. to the theory of this book, monotheism developed because Josiah, backed by a bunch of isolationist traders, pushed for Yahweh as the only God at a time when His iconographic stock was really high in Israel. He kicked the other gods out of the Temple, etc. Acc. to Hume, by contrast, Monotheism developed because pagans kept topping themselves in their praise of their Gods until one of them was like, "Oh, yeah? My God is so great, He's infinite," and that kinda ended the game because if your God is infinite that means he's the only God.

Mordy, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:09 (sixteen years ago)

And yeah, obviously you're right that stuff like understanding astronomy helped with that. It doesn't make sense to say that a God is responsible for the tides when you can calculate them, or eclipses, etc. That's kinda the source of a lot of Greek stuff.

Mordy, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:11 (sixteen years ago)

Mordy, your book sounds cool; the above was just my own hypothesis. I've been having to read a ton of Joseph Campbell myth etc. books which are (of course) big on the embedded history metaphor and syncretism, most of which I can get down with (and no sign of the country club anti-Semitism people used to mention in the '80s PC wars jumps out with any immediacy).

I <3 the idea of the pantheon as quarreling family, each with a job to do and interdependent.

gnothi sautée (suzy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:18 (sixteen years ago)

the gradual erosion of the need for magic will hopefully lead to a societal norm where humans act like maybe they have some responsibility/say in where things are headed, or help to focus otherwise distracted/misplaced attention in this direction

super late to the game but you realize that this will never, ever happen, right

struck through in my prime (HI DERE), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:19 (sixteen years ago)

yeah, that quote fucks up the casualty

Mordy, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:20 (sixteen years ago)

so many false binaries I feel Momus may appear

bnw, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:24 (sixteen years ago)

where's the false binary? Noodle wasn't like T|S Consumerism / Religion. Obv you can do both if you really want

Mordy, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:26 (sixteen years ago)

Again tho, this happens plenty outside of monotheism plus I strongly doubt that religion itself wd transform an otherwise liberal and decent guy into a jerkwad - jerkwads tend to bring their jerkwaddery to the party imo

I am not a jerkwad and I wasn't an un-questioning disciple even when I was IN the system, but I learned the subjugation lesson all too well. Don't underestimate how much this forms the underpinnings of worldview and self-view.

Reading makes my ovaries hurt (Laurel), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:32 (sixteen years ago)

T|S Consumerism / Religion might as well be the thread title, dude. The only thing I'll say is that both should either be looked at in practice or in their ideal textbook definitions. Looking at consumerism in practice vs religion up on the shelf is gaming the T|S.

bnw, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:35 (sixteen years ago)

Laurel, ty for that, until you showed I was the only nun in the abbey.

gnothi sautée (suzy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:38 (sixteen years ago)

this thread title is fuckkkkkked and i don't really understand what is being argued by it

call all destroyer, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:39 (sixteen years ago)

Anyway, off to my Queer + Religion class to discuss American religion + consumerism!

Mordy, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:40 (sixteen years ago)

If only somebody had bothered to explain.

with a bad girl's enlightenment and a Buddha's passion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:40 (sixteen years ago)

well since disbelief in god is implied in the thread title and first post i don't even see how it's a choice?

call all destroyer, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:42 (sixteen years ago)

Just wanted to lay down a lot of dogmatic false dichotomies tbh

with a bad girl's enlightenment and a Buddha's passion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:45 (sixteen years ago)

well then excellent job my dude

call all destroyer, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:46 (sixteen years ago)

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2206/1770894668_27ac604ffc.jpg?v=0

with a bad girl's enlightenment and a Buddha's passion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:47 (sixteen years ago)

you really nailed it ;)

bnw, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 15:48 (sixteen years ago)

had to run w/a work mess there for a while, basically after a quick read through suzy covering most of my viewpoint.


the way you think is a one size fits all approach that works for EVERYONE yes omg i am bowled over by your superior logic

― Karen Tregaskin, 27 January 2010 13:08 (2 hours ago) Bookmark

hmmm. i'm pretty sure i explicitly stated that was 'for me'. YMMV and all that, but if something so trifling is enough for you to go off the handle like that then i guess asking you to read the post is a bit of a waste of time in any case.

the tone of the thread has hardly been crazy confrontational or anything, as NV said we're just musing away a wednesday lonely guys/girls just thinking baout things.

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 16:16 (sixteen years ago)

Darragh, you did pretty much say that stories & metaphors and anything except the literal truth (to the extent that we can even know it) is for weaklings and fraidy cats and imbeciles. I would have refuted that myself except Karen & others beat me to it and then the thread moved on.

Reading makes my ovaries hurt (Laurel), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 16:23 (sixteen years ago)

well then i will fight u now madam

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 16:25 (sixteen years ago)

if it came across like that (as i've said i was dipping in and out in a kind of hurry) then apologies that it came off like that. most anything i come out with on ilx carries an unspoken 'this is from my limited, graceless and impatient POV' and if i could find a way to add that to my username then i think i'd get into a lot less trouble.

IRL my eyebrows are v funny and soften the tone of anything i say somewhat

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 16:27 (sixteen years ago)

Pistols at dawn iirc

Reading makes my ovaries hurt (Laurel), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 16:28 (sixteen years ago)

my catholic upbringing forbids violence towards women i think

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 16:31 (sixteen years ago)

except on an institutional level obv

Not even if your arse had nipples (darraghmac), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 16:32 (sixteen years ago)

i think there's a potential for religious beliefs to be a) liberal and questioning, and b) oppositional to the worst excesses of free market fuckwittery.

yeah this is how mine are, or how i want them to be, at least. in particular, the way i think of individual worth is very much based in the idea of people's inherent value, and very opposed to the rationalistic self-transformation model that i think western capitalism pushes. and while my deeply held belief about that existed before i became christian, it's one of the few things i've always believed based on a sort of inexplicable faith, and religion gives me a vocabulary to talk about it and a worldview to fit it into. religious beliefs are less important in opposing the excessive oppressions of capitalism, i think, because there's a strong moral case to be made for social justice in purely secular terms.

Maria, Wednesday, 27 January 2010 17:02 (sixteen years ago)

Thread premise: false dichotomy.

Mit der Kattzheit kaempfen Goetter selbst vergebens (Michael White), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 17:12 (sixteen years ago)

http://www.hypeful.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/groundhogday.jpg

with a bad girl's enlightenment and a Buddha's passion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 17:14 (sixteen years ago)

xpost
unfortunately your inscription of that lack within the thread has now become the very condition of the thread's possibility

LRN, which helps companies build ethical cultures (bernard snowy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 17:15 (sixteen years ago)

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v165/noodle_vague/groundhogday.jpg

with a bad girl's enlightenment and a Buddha's passion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 17:15 (sixteen years ago)

did I just xpost continental philosophy across an empty signifier

LRN, which helps companies build ethical cultures (bernard snowy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 17:15 (sixteen years ago)

I'm gettin' too old for this shit

LRN, which helps companies build ethical cultures (bernard snowy), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 17:17 (sixteen years ago)

Fuckin' groundhogs, always driving with their id.

Mit der Kattzheit kaempfen Goetter selbst vergebens (Michael White), Wednesday, 27 January 2010 17:18 (sixteen years ago)


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