After taking a day to think through it, and especially with the posts of Darth Wong and _some_ of the points of mr. friendly guy which used honest (and correct) arguments, rather than distort what I was saying (like Bush), I am partly changing my position (conceding), due to parts of my previous position being indefensible (i.e. wrong).
First let me make clear that it was not my intention to defend religion, or to free it from the "accusation" of Dawkins. If you read my very first posts, I say:
Although he is constantly referring to "Religion", I believe he is really talking about a greater category of things, of which Religion is only one item.
I never said that religions do not exhibit such traits, I said that it is not merely religions that eexhibit that trait, but that it is Ideologies as well,
So there I was not saying we should ignore what religions have "contributed" to the existing and past problems of the world, I was however saying (well, not saying explicitly, but that was my line of thought) that if we look one step further maybe we can better find the source of the problem, the source that is responsible for religion and for religious or cultish behaviour, which is not exclusive to religion, but also to Nationalism and (some) other Ideologies when taken to the extreme. I mean, I guess everybody in this thread will probably hold the position that religion was not created by god, but by man. It was hugely "successful" (from a memetic POV), so there is probably something inherent in humans that makes them behave in certain ways. If it hadn't been "real" Reliions with Deities, it would have been cultish-like following of other similar Ideologies that have the potential for the same violence.
Apparently whenever I say that it may be helpful to look at the source of the problem of religions, to also understand "cultish" behaviour in non-religious (but "religion-like) scenarios, this is taken to mean that I am defending Religion. That was not my intention (although I have to concede that I did slip into that terrority with a few statements, but that happened
after I was accused of doing it).
Now as said above, here are the points I concede:
Darth Wong wrote:I would argue that "extremism" can be intrinsically limited by the nature of what they believe, so it is the nature of the belief rather than the extremism of the belief which is most important because there will always be a spectrum of intensity of belief; the trick is to change the limits of that spectrum. [snip - example - snip]
That is true. And in that respect not every Ideology is the same. I thought that became clear (by implication), when I said that there would never be such a thing as a humanist suicide attacker. So not all Ideologies are prone to extremism in the same way, or rather extremism in them will lead to vastly different outcomes (with some non-violent, some violent, and some very violent). And the abrahmaic religions are on the "top" of such a scale of a worst thinkable outcome, due to the language and explicit statements that are contained at their base.
As I said, it's very hard to conclusively talk about a non-existant hypothetical world. I previously claimed we would have had the same problems if religion had not existed. I am conceding that statement. Instead I
would fall back on the position that if religion had been replaced by Ideologies that fare similar on the above scale, we would have the same problems, and if religions had been replaced by ideologies that are lesser on that scale (or no Ideologies at all), there would have been less problems. However two things I note: 1) I am saying "would", because as the position is now described, it's probably (almost?) a truism and isn't very helpful. and 2) I believe that due to human nature it is highly likely if it had not been actual religions (with Deities and supernatural aspects) that arose back in the day, it would have been something very similar in it's nature and potential for violence on the above scale.
Stas Bush wrote:The USSR was (or, rather, became) quasi-religious. If a fucking Egyptic pyramid with a dead body of a leader and slogans like "Great Stalin Lives Forever" don't make it very fucking clear for you that the USSR had been taken over by a cult of definetely religious nature.
That's the point I am trying to make. Take away real deities and real religions, and the same people will cling to Ersatz-Religion. Now there must be a reason for that. And I find that to be the more interesting aspect.
Of course a lot depends on how those religions would have "magically" disappeared/ could be made to disappear today, obviously trying to squelch the early religions with force did not work out very well. CaptJodan mentions education, which is a very good (and obvious) point. The situation even in the US though shows, that it's not an easy process and that there still is resistance. Yet that approach is leaps and bounds above any sort of violence used to settle the matter - and not only that, but education is also an "armor" against fallin for other cultish/religion-like behaviour.
mr friendly guy made a reference to the big majority of religious people that are non-violent, or "non-violent DESPITE their religion". That's an important group to look at with respect to Dawkins statement. Now, when you try to campaign on the issue that religion is inherently evil and violent (even while agreeing that luckily most people following it manage to live relatively decently and non-violent), you are getting into a position that is very undesirable from a diplomatic POV. Religion to many people (even when they are only superficially practicing it) is part of their history and identity, and people become rather touchy on the subject. You'll certainly not get them to concede, that yes, it'll probably be better to completely distance theirselves from it - that would be just as successful as trying to get them to drop their language and start using another language (of course those are not the same things, but people would probably react similarly to those two requests). I hope that explains why I thought that expanding the problem space is helpful/interesting.
Privacy is a transient notion. It started when people stopped believing that God could see everything and stopped when governments realized there was a vacancy to be filled. - Roger Needham