Other, less dangerous flavors of human frailty. There is no Church of Eugenics; no far-reaching organization teaching humans from infancy to believe in irrational ideas; no promotion of questionable moral codes in government and life; no favorable protection under the law. Science...
Different flavors, but same frailty.
You will also not find a Church of Hate, a Church of Sexism, etc. yet you ascribe such crimes to being religiously inherent. This is what I meant by double standard. Even assuming your attribution of these elements to religion is correct, they are tertiary elements, not central themes. You no more find a specific Religion uniformly espousing a doctrine of sexism than you find a science department espousing eugenics.
Though there is no Church of Eugenics, Eugenics is a uniquely scientific bastard child; that evil, in that form, could not have existed without science. Eugenics is not a central theme to science, but it is a product of it. A product resulting from miss application and abuse of science, admittedly, but if science can be used as such and remain blameless, why can't religion?
It would seem that you are objecting not so much to religion alone, but non-scientific beliefs in general, particularly as applied through a social network. That is, you are not only objection to religions "questionable moral codes" but you are also objection to those codes being disseminated through "indoctrination" by religious individuals into their children.
However, once again this seems to be a trait that is in no way unique to religion and so to blame religion alone for this folly is what gives the appearance of a double standard. One hardly needs religion to indoctrinate children with irrational ideas. Merely ask people how to spell "island" and you almost always get an irrational answer (the s in "island" does not belong; it was added in the 15th century when academics inaccurately accessed the word's etymological history. The English language has been irrational in this continued misspelling since). Likewise, one hardly needs religion to indoctrinate children with an irrational and naive perspective of science (one merely needs to look to The Jetsons, Buck Rogers, and other forms of soft-science fiction marketed to children). The widespread desire in America for a pill that can make individuals lose weight without a change in lifestyle, or the belief that science will cure all sickness, or the belief that science will bring immortality, etc, are all signs of an irrational belief in the power of science. Indeed, compare the popular definition of a "theory" with the scientific definition of the word; religious or not, people often get this wrong.
One might well say that science cannot be held accountable for the misconceptions disseminated about it. Yet, if that is the case, should religion be held accountable for the misconceptions disseminated about it?
If someone wants to whip up the masses into a fervor with science, they're going to have to have damn good evidence.
Yeah, no.
The Patagonian Giants were accepted fairly readily. Problems with the accounts of the "stone age" tasadays were happily overlooked until it was revealed (by non-scientists) that they were a hoax. Scientists from Harvard were easily fooled into thinking that residents of Vilcabamba, a small town in Ecuador, were incredibly long-lived; the village having generally three times as many centarians as America, when adjusted for population. The somewhat recent misconduct of Shinichi Fujimura was understandably accepted by the Scientific community (his hoax-claims were difficult to scientifically test), so while not a shining moment for science, it isn't as black of a mark as other failures of the peer-review process. The case of Mary Toft is far from so benign, as scientifically minded individuals ignored evidence of the fraud. Likewise, that the Calaveras skull was able to survive for years is ridiculous (found in 1866, it wasn't until 1901 that the matter was even begun to be put to rest, and even then, in the face of clear evidence of forgery, some scientists held to the belief that it was real).
The list goes on. It is quite easy to fool scientists and the scientific community; no "damn good evidence" is needed.
However, though these examples are rather ill-favored towards science, this is not an argument that science is bad or particularly gullible, especially not more so than religion. One only has to look at those throughout history who have claimed that the world was about to end, to see that religious individuals are quite easy to fool as well. This is, however, an argument pointing to your double standard. It seems that when religious individuals are gullible and allow harmful elements to enter into their belief, you blame the larger concept of religion. But when scientists are gullible, you seem to expunge science of fault.
Allow me to here state clearly that science does have a particular advantage and safeguard over religion in the matter of overcoming the introduction of harmful and irrational elements: that of
formal peer-review. All of the above listed hoaxes were, in time, discovered and removed from the scientific community. While the community might have been particularly lax in allowing them any acceptance, the community was not lax in attending to the correction of this flaw.
Religion certainly does not have this benefit. While there is a degree of what one might term informal peer-review, as the debates regarding various religious issues demonstrates, this does not occur in as wide-spread of a manner as in science, and certainly not with the same degree of vigor or thoroughness. Religion is rather slow in this regard; while daily the flaws of Creationism are eroding away as its legitimacy, far too many religious individuals still hold to it in the face of clear evidence of its inaccuracy. Whereas the scientific community almost moves as one to reject clearly false concepts, religion splinters and fractures so that as some move towards the acceptance of true concepts, some cling to the old ones.
Perhaps it is this flaw in particular that you object most to? While both science and religion are quite capable of making mistakes, science does leave religion in the dust in regards to correcting those mistakes.
If I stab you and then treat the wound, should I be praised as a healer; should I be seen as good for my actions?
Depends; do you hold an M.D. and are you employed as a surgeon?
Much of my comments were regarding perception and the inherent difficulty of judging objectively if something is good or bad. If you stab me for no purpose, then I'd say you were bad. But if you stabbed me for a purpose, and if that purpose is desirable, they I'd say you were good.
Immediate unpleasantness must be weighed against long term benefits before one declares something objectively good or bad. However, as you brought up in regards to my own personal experiences, this is incredibly difficult. That which is bad may give way to good, and good may give way to bad. To quote the LOTR movie: "Even the very wise cannot see all ends."
This touches onto my statement that the only logical standpoint is agnosticism. In this regard, it seems that it is equally illogical to say that an experience is good or evil or, indeed, indifferent.
Believing in God is not virtuous.
While it is possible a greater good may come from any given bit of suffering, an omnipotent being must have the power to accomplish the same good without the suffering. Of course, that's assuming an omnipotent god. But given such an entity, for whom all courses of action are equally trivial, it is cruel to chose the course that does not have the least suffering.
The simpler solution still is that we live in a godless universe; unconscious and thus unconcerned with the trivia of a bunch of apes on a little rock somewhere. That not every event is caused by an intelligent entity, nor is it for any greater purpose. Some may find such a notion upsetting. I find it comforting.
First, I do hope I didn't state or imply that belief in god is virtuous. If I did, I am quite sorry. Though I do believe I both stated and implied that if the pursuit of truth is virtuous, then the acceptance of unpleasant truths is likewise virtuous.
Second, regarding omnipotence, you are quite correct that such a being could produce similar results without suffering. The question, however, is why? I asked before, why do you believe suffering and pain is bad? Though I am not among them, there are individuals who would argue that suffering and pain are pleasurable and good (specifically, individuals that hold to specific sexual fetishes). So let us remove all religious implications and attempt to address this in the void of the possibility of the divine.
You seem to associate suffering with cruelty and general badness. A masochist would associate suffering with pleasure and goodness. Please, do tell me why your perspective is right and a masochist's perspective is wrong.
However, that is a lesser issue; the greater issue is, assuming that suffering is bad, why would an omnipotent and good creator allow it?
The answer I would provide for this is a rather illogical one (but are you surprised?): free will.
Applying Occam's Razor, there is no reason to assume that human free will exists. I see no reason to assume it does, I would behave exact as I do now even if it didn't exist, so why suppose it without necessity?
Indeed, science would seem to imply that free will doesn't exist. If the beginning position of a system can be known, and the forces active in that system are likewise understood, then the position of that system at any given time point can be determined because it directly followed from a proceeding time point, which came from another, and can be traced definitively to the known starting point. This is just a chain of scientific principles; events follow from earlier events.
I bring this up because free will limits a limitless being. That is, assuming god exists, assuming god is omnipotent, and assuming he desires to create and allow beings to exist with a will independent of his own, then suffering must inherently be involved. Such a god could produce any result by any means, but such a god, under these assumptions, has willfully limited itself, thereby willingly allowed suffering.
So the greater issue would be, which would be the greater good: for there to be no suffering but no free will, or for there to be free will and for there to be suffering?
As I believe (rather illogically) in free will, I thus believe that suffering is necessary and potentially good, and I would rather have free will and suffering than not.
As for comforting, I would actually agree. A universe in which there is no god is quite comforting. But comfort is not virtuous either.
This view is overly simplistic. Human knowledge has not been static over the last two thousand years.
I quite agree, however I think you have conflated modernocentrism with human knowledge; the two are not the same, and I am sorry if I implied that they were.
Modernocentrism is the idea that the present is superior to all other points in the past and (as a subsequent supposition) that the present is superior to all other points that will follow. Part of the point being that in the future the faults of the present may well be as ridiculed as we currently ridicule the faults of the past, and that our own harsh treatment of faults of the past is itself a fault of the present.
If one were to graph human development, one would generally find that it does not form a straight line "upward." Rather, human development is volatile; we advance, regress, advance, regress, etc. To graph it would look like a read-out of the stock markets, sometimes.
So then we have a problem; while humanity may generally be more developed in the present than we were in the far past, we have no means of properly judging if we are more developed than the resent past; until historians can look back at this age, there is no objective way to determine if we live at a peak or a trough.
While we may know more in the present than at any point in the past, that does not necessitate that we are better able to make "right" decisions in the present.
I suppose one might term this a dichotomy between knowledge and ethics (though perhaps useful, I would maintain that such a comparison is not perfectly accurate). Knowledge is something amassed, but ethics is something changed and modified. Because of this, though we know more, we can't know if our ethics are more proper than they used to be. We think they are, but one would expect us to think that regardless of the objective state.
Like much of what I have said, this is an argument for the ability to perceive. While we believe we are more sophisticated "ethnically" now than in the past, we are capable of imagining that the reality is something other than what we perceive. We can imagine a world in which slavery is objectively good and will be reinstituted in the future, for example. I don't believe that it is objectively good, but I can imagine such a world.
This is not to say that sexist, racism, oppression, etc, if it in reality exists as a fundamental component of religion, is good. Rather, if, in seeking the truth regarding religion we find these things to likewise be "truth" (that is, that which is objectively good, as I am using the word here), we aught be willing to change our perspective.
Which gets down to a fundamental point; even when blaming religion for various ills, we should first establish the validity of our own perspective of what is good and bad. This is not to say that you should start posting arguments as to why sexism or racism are bad; rather, it is an encouragement to be sure that when we fault an individual or institution for something, we are first sure that our reason for doing so goes beyond "well I just don't like it."
This harkens back to the mindless indoctrination Zeality was talking about, and specifically overcoming that indoctrination. Everyone is subject to it, so I am attempting to argue that it is good to ensure that such indoctrination is valid before we use that indoctrination in our arguments.
This is not true. If sexism is itself bad, and religion promotes it as good, then religion is at odds with what is true. Or put another way, the religion is false, and since our sincere desire is to know the truth, we must reject it as such. So yes, it must influence our perception of religion.
I would quite agree with that train of thought; however, I would also note that you proposed a supposition that I had not included (for the reasons stated above): that religion is a secondary issue of investigation, not the primary issue.
That is, you seem to be claiming that if sexism is bad, and if religion promotes sexism, then religion is bad. I agree with that. However, my argument was essentially if religion is good (or true, as I used the word), and if religion promotes sexism, then sexism is good.
These are the same trains of thought with different nouns, I think.
I think you misunderstand Occam's Razor.
Actually, I think you misunderstand my intent. The example was meant for amusement, not for a serious debate. But as I didn't clearly state as much, such a misunderstanding is quite understandable.
If you approach what I wrote from the popular definition of occam's razor (that being, the simplest solution is most often the correct one), then yes, the "poof, god did it" approach would be the favored result; Science is incredibly complex, and thus the amusement. However, the popular definition is not the correct definition.
The correct definition cannot be applied between science and religion because the very first premise is violated; they are not competing hypotheses, nor are their starting states equal. Occam's razor cannot be applied for the simple reason that any scientific hypothesis can be verified but no religious "hypothesis" can be (at least, not from our perspective). The starting positions are not equal, so the concept cannot be applied.
What defines a religion then? The beliefs of the laity, clergy and/or theologians? The text of the religion's holy books? The interpretation of one of the above groups?
A wonderful question. Perhaps we would define religion as "a specific fundamental set of beliefs and practices generally agreed upon by a number of persons or sects" ... except, that could reasonably include forms of government. Should we define it as a "body of persons adhering to a particular set of beliefs and practices"? Alas, that could include scientists, as they adhere to the belief that empirical experimentation is fundamental for understanding the universe and they adhere to a practice of academic integrity (those instances I noted earlier of scientists being duped usually resulted from a breach of this integrity).
So perhaps the definition we need would be this one: Religion is "a set of beliefs concerning the cause, nature, and purpose of the universe, esp. when considered as the creation of a superhuman agency or agencies, usually involving devotional and ritual observances, and often containing a moral code governing the conduct of human affairs." The key component here is that these beliefs must include the conception of a superhuman agency. Devotionals, ritual observances, and moral codes are all unnecessary to a definition of religion. As religions do often include these things, one might discuss the comparative merits of these things, but a fault in one is not the fault of the whole, as the part is nonessential to the whole.
So for Christianity, one plausible definition of what religion is in this specific case could be found in the apostles' creed:
I believe in God the Father Almighty,
maker of heaven and earth;
And in Jesus Christ his only Son our Lord:
who was conceived by the Holy Spirit,
born of the Virgin Mary,
suffered under Pontius Pilate,
was crucified, dead, and buried;
the third day he rose from the dead;
he ascended into heaven,
and sitteth at the right hand of God the Father Almighty;
from thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead.
I believe in the Holy Spirit,
the holy catholic church,
the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins,
the resurrection of the body,
and the life everlasting.
Amen.
Though it should be noted that in this usage, the word "catholic" is rather archaic, meaning "universal." Also, it should be noted that minor variations in this creed do exist.
That is a system of beliefs held by nearly all Christians regarding the superhuman agency responsible for the creation of the universe.
So it would seem that if you want to attack the pure religion aspect of Christianity, you'd need to attack those points. Which, even if successful, would really only result in revealing a benign group of dimwits; hardly the lurking menace that Christianity (or religion in general) is sometimes portrayed as.
Ultimately though, aren't we all agnostic? None of us can prove beyond any shadow of a doubt that there must be or must not be some deities sitting on the other side of human perception. I call myself an atheist and not an agnostic because, while it is true that I am in theory an agnostic, I am in practice an atheist, for without evidence of gods, I live as though there aren't any. Of course, this brings up the inverse of what has been brought up before: The existence of a god or gods does not imply that any present religion is true.
Not really; even if we admit that we can't know for certain, we heavily lean in one direction or another and behave for all intents and purposes as if we did know for certain. To use an analogy, we might call an agnostic someone who does not know if a boat will float or sink. Even if you admit that you don't know for certain that the boat will float, the fact that you have gotten into the boat implies that you have made your choice.
But you last comment is one that I would quite agree with; it is possible that even if god exists, no present religion is true. Which further makes the rejection of god on the grounds of the behavior of religion a curious one. Even if all religion is inaccurate, that does not speak a wit about if god exists.
Still, a quick look at Methodism's Wikipedia article reveals that while the Methodist churches have functionally overcome sexism, there's still room for improvement on the valuing of homosexuals, and then there's the nefarious discouragement of drinking alcohol. But kidding aside, I think the Methodist churches are generally going in a better direction than other, more static, religions.
Amusingly, Methodism is a rather conservative sect of Christianity, and a very slow moving one too. But the difference between it and other conservative sects of Christianity is that it is moving, and intentionally so. I generally think that they (we? I dunno, it’s weird being part of a specific Christian sect now) are the closest one will get to a scientific approach in religious circles. Methodists want to be sure that they have things right. They will make damn sure that they are wrong before they will change, and they will make damn sure that what they are changing to is right.
But to be fair, that is a bit of an exaggeration. That is the Methodist perspective, but like all things, practice doesn't always match up with the ideals. Still, I like it more than most.
At least from what I know about the last United Methodist conference in which the issue of homosexuality was discussed, the reason why the church didn't adjust its position was that tradition had not been shown to be incorrect nor had the new stance been shown to be correct. They're sort of conservatively agnostic; if they don't know which way is the right way to go, they'll stay put.
Certainly, the modern world might want Methodists to move more quickly on these matters, but quick movement has its own pitfalls. The Assemblies of God, for example, is a much more lively movement. But it moved in what I believe you'd agree is an undesirable direction (as a reminder, this would be the denomination that scared some people away from Sarah Palin).
The analogy breaks down, I think, because religion is so wildly open to interpretation. How do you determine which are valid and which are invalid?
I know this isn't what you meant, and I almost didn't say anything, but I found it amusing. I hope that once I explain why I find this amusing, you will too. I do not mean it, however, to be an argument of any sort.
I find this statement amusing because, in essence, you are faulting religion for being open and free, while you are favoring science because it is closed and restrictive. If taken out of context, this could be mistaken for a pro-religion comment.
For which reason it'll be fascinating to see if they find anything buried deep within the ice of Mars.
Actually, I have wondered fairly often what the implications would be, if any, if it is ever discovered that extraterrestrial intelligent life (if it exists and if we can communicate with it) has a religion, and if that religion matches up reasonably well with a religion on earth.
It is a question, I suppose, of improbability. How improbable must something be before the divine becomes the more probable explanation (if ever)?