tldr; How your worldview is interpreted - and how you act on it - is more important than labeling yourself.
Also, "be clear about your ethics, bruh". Coherency is the utmost important, and that's why articulation matters. Not everyone is capable of articulating, though, but they are capable of accruing wisdom by taking on responsibilities and thereby experiencing life through hardship (aka, those "trials and tribulations", and ultimately "triumphs", that I mentioned).
Recent sociopolitical drama (both in India and globally) has pretty much exhausted me, but it has also given me a lot to think about. Because of my own innate nature (being unable to understand social norms, what is and isn't appropriate, what I should or shouldn't say, etc.), I've pretty much become a Shitlord, testing the boundaries of what is and isn't moral and to what extent, and with certain triumphs and failures I've become more confident with myself (even if, at times, somebody might despise me for it) having a coherent justification for my actions, and yet at the same time having clearly defined boundaries for myself that I will never cross, or which boundaries I have to cross only when specific dire circumstances call for it. This is how my inner Gandhian pacifist also reconciles with my recently integrated value of viciousness, or integrating my shadow, if you will.
And I do this, not because I wish to ally myself with some ideology, not because I'm afraid to be labeled or something, but primarily because I want to be effective at what I do, self-dependant, also somebody that people I care about can depend on. If I cannot take care of, and protect and provide for, the people I love, then I will regard myself as a failure. That will be my hell.
This is essentially an act of Soul Construction (something that Dr JBP calls, but applies to a different context than I have), and the more formidable soul you're capable of building the more integrity it possesses, the more confident you are, and the less likely it is capable of being broken. I have yet to reach that apex -- a destination I call
Cyan Los.
I get what you're saying here, but all I can say is that this is the most millennial thing I've ever heard. Millennials hate having labels placed on them.
But that's not what I'm saying, and I think you misunderstand me. I never said labels are a bad thing.
Millennials are weird, they eschew labels and identify themselves with even more of them, all because they're drowning in their own uncertainty. And then they whine about having anxieties. (I have sympathies with people who are genuinely suffering from Depression and Anxieties and can't help it. But Millenials CAN help it; it's just that they're too stupid and arrogant to want to. I know because I tried to help most of them.)
What I mean is that labels are useful, just not as useful as the things they are meant to represent -- as descriptors to your values. Using inaccurate descriptors, much like having a bad synopsis for a book, will only cause a massive confusion with expectations and coherency between you and your held values, and it compromises your integrity as a person. It makes you metaphysically (and often psychologically) vulnerable. That's my general point: utility for utility's sake.
However, the issue with utility for utility's sake when it comes to labels is, of course as you pointed out, a social negotiation between people to help catalog and generalize you. But I'd argue that
they have to, at least on first sight, because at first they would know nothing about you, and need an anchor of expectation to help define you as an individual. This is also another reason why sometimes people foolishly apply labels to themselves, no because represent the values inherent in that label, but because it has currency in social affair. This is also why having an accurate label for yourself matters if you wish to communicate exactly who or what you are.
For me, Pantheism has only ever been a personal label for me, to keep track of myself, and nothing more. There has seldom a point in any social interaction that I actually identified myself as one, because there's just no need for it, unless there is.
(Side note: I work with a mostly Indians these days and I think, fundamentally, Indians are much more open to the idea of pantheism (or a pantheistic-based worldview) than many other cultures. I think it stems from the less black-and-white cultural philosophy influenced by Hinduism than, say, the United States, based on the Heaven-or-Hell philosophy of (most of) Christianity. Or at least that's my observation; I'm not from India, so I can't say for certain.)
Hah! Maybe the reason is the fact that Hinduism inherently consists of a Pantheistic system (as well as an Atheistic one.... don't ask how, it's a pretty complex system even for me). Most Hindus know this with the saying, "There's God in every grain of sand". However, the versions of Pantheism between Hinduism and Spinoza are not the same. They are compatible, however.
For me, despite my soul searching, the universe truly is chaos. There is no order.
And that's the issue here. Order isn't granted to you. Order is yours to make. The scientific method is a manifestation of that human-invented structure of reason, because without some semblance of Order it will be nigh-impossible for you to navigate through Chaos.
In fact, I'm writing a funny poem on that, and I think I have an idea... Hmm....
However, I don't think you're a stranger to this idea, given what you mentioned earlier about nature and civilization.
I am confident in the scientific method, which states there is no empirical evidence to support any sort of deity or supernatural.
Yeah. And nobody cares. xD Even in organized religion, the belief of a supernatural deity is nothing more than simplified understanding of tradition for those who don't have the capacity to comprehend it -- I would know, because I know how traditions are interpreted regardless of what they were meant to be about. For the people who CAN comprehend, on the other hand, trying to find an empirical evidence for such a deity is meaningless because the deity is meant to be metaphysical concept, a system of ideas (a philosophy, if you will) rather than something materialistic to quantify. But regardless of whether you can or cannot comprehend it, as a complex system of ideas, that deity serves a function -- guidelines to trace your steps on.
I'm not particularly religious, for instance (honestly, the only Supernatural God I believe in is our lord and savior Joseph Joestar), but where do you think my beliefs come from? What sort of beliefs do you think Atheistic Christians might have?
But I think, ultimately, my pantheistic view ended with similar logic to my theist beliefs in that, if there is a god, s/he would be a "dead" god. I can see every day, all around me, that there is no divinity that influences or provides us with anything.
And that was part of my point earlier: You're stuck arguing with yourself about the existence of God, without going further or deeper, such as what that God is meant to represent, or what sort of a manifestation is that God. If you can't escape your mental loop to analyze that, then you will be unable to go even further than that, and therefore unable to comprehend what you are constantly thinking about.
But that's ultimately where I fell into the atheism category over pantheism.
That's perfectly fine, man. Question is, where do your values come from? What is the pillar that you check yourself by and quantify your progress? What is your end-goal? What is your daily campaign?
I say this because Atheism is not a pillar of morality. It is a descriptor for a lack of supernatural deity. If you say you get it from
Empathy, I'm going to laugh at you.
IMO, you seem to take a lot of aspects from different religions and cultures, such as what you love about Pantheism and Hinduism as you say. So if you're constructing your own pillar based on the best things you find from different culture (such as, "Work Ethic" from Protestantism), the only question left would be how coherent that pillar is, and how frequently you update it in order to abide by it religiously and track your progress. Not a bad thing. In fact, it's a necessity for everything.
One doesn't need to be good in the name of a god
Eh, that's a pretty archaic way to view God. I wouldn't blame you for perceiving it that way, though, considering a lot of religious nut-heads (especially Islamists) who do a lot of shady (and often self-righteous) things "in the name of" a God.
That is the big issue you get when you start to vied God as a supernatural All-Powerful Being that can do anything (including erase your sins), rather than what it actually is -- a series of allegories, a metophorical concept, a set of ideas necessitating to be held as "Supreme", existing outside and beyond humanity (unless you're a Pantheist; then it's embedded within humanity). From that perspective, saying "being good in the name of a god" is redundant and nonsensical, because then you're better off saying, "Being good in the name of a name of a name of a name."
Some people get challenged on this, because they think that morality must be defined by something larger than us rather than a combination of ingrain moral law and personal worldview.
But those people are correct, though. For one, there are personal moral codes (example: Don't leave your injured friend behind), but then there are also universal moral codes (example: Thou shalt not kill / betray / steal). Universality of some of those morals are supremely larger than us all, far larger than any collective we know.
Also, the whole point of having that manifestation of morality as something separate and outside of one's self is that we can't trust ourselves, as individuals (or collective) to be the final arbiters of Goodness, because we can be morally compromised, and as a result we may do shitty things. Sometimes we, as individuals, do evil things believing those actions are good and righteous (aka, our self-righteousness). See: God-Kings.
Labels are meaningless if they do not constitute action (behaviors). By this logic, all that is important is who we are.
Yes. And if
what you are is incomplete, then that causes a serious issue not just for you but also everybody around you, no matter what label you ascribe yourself. A broken self constitutes a broken behavior. So essentially, what's important is to have a set of rules for yourself and stick to it. Religiously.
Treat others how you want to be treated is always a great mindset to have. I try to live by it every day, even to my own self-detriment at times.
I concur. Although, that's a very Christian / Kantian thing to say.
I find Dr. Peterson to be a mixed bag. But now I'm curious how/why your atheist friends needed saving. Saved from what?
Doesn't really matter, tbh. He's just a man; he makes mistakes, says the wrong things sometimes. What matters is if his ideas serve utility, and for a lot of people it does.
As for my friends, some of them were ideologues, and as a result they were a mess in their own lives. Some of them were legitimately depressed and wanted to kill themselves. Some of them were struggling hard in their life and relationships. Some of them were too weak to do anything about their dire circumstances, where they were always trampled upon by everybody. Some of them were just arrogant fucks who acted despicable because there was never any consequences to their actions, until one day it came to bite them in the ass and they were too helpless to do anything about it, making them even more jaded.
I'd hate to make Dr Peterson sound like some kind of a messiah, but he really did turn a lot of lives around. My ideologue friends became more open-minded and organized. My depressed friends managed to regain their self-efficacy and work towards being more effective at overcoming their sickness (with some medical intervention, of course). Relationship folks just got better at love. The weak ones found a way out of their pit. The dicks became more humble and, further more, helpful and responsible.
Me? I accrued some free wisdom, foresight, exponentially increasing my ability to learn and get better, conquer my weaknesses, learning gratitude, being patient with people, being a bit more disciplined and focused (which is hard for me, but I managed it at the detriment to my own health, which I'm working on again), organize my life, learning to negotiate with people even if I don't like them, being goal-oriented, etc. All sorts of things I could never imagine my younger self from a few years ago to be capable of. And I still don't think I'm at my best, lol.
And what's interesting is that none of us even needed to buy into his Christian views (except for, obviously, Christian friends). His work is helpful either way. And that's weird, because he says a lot of stupid shit about Hinduism. XD But I can pardon that for the bigger picture.