Darth Wong wrote:Well to be honest, your definition is seriously fucked up. You're arguing that religion helps maintain social control, which you define as uniformity and obedience to authority. But you argue that religion only helps with this in "backwards homogeneous societies", which are already uniform by definition and hence do not require religion to make them uniform. So really, you're only arguing that religion helps maintain obedience to authority, and for that, I still want to see evidence.
Well, religion both produces authority and legitimize them in the minds of believers. In many stable arrangements, religious authority is wedded to secular authority of physical power.
One example of the effect of religious control would be holy wars across history. In such wars, people are united despite often terrible personal costs for such action. Without the power of religion, it is exceedingly difficult to achieve a level of obedience to the point of self destruction, like the sucide bomber we all know about. Traditional application of physical force is rather ineffective in this case. (an army of conscripts can not be transformed to a force of sucide bombers by the threat of force)
As for uniformity, religion enforces uniformity by default. The so called "uniform, backward society" is the result of the religious value system that legitimize various forms of destruction to be applied to those that disagree.
There are other ideological systems that is similar to religion that has the same effect, but religion is a very common one.