Count Chocula wrote:Theism, i.e. organized religion, is a time-proven way to teach a large segment of your populace rules of behavior. Some of that teaching may include a guy who is rilly God who died for you, or a fat bellied guy sitting under a tree contemplating reality, or a bandit who fucked nine year olds (sorry can't resist), or that you must grow your hair in braids and wear a funny hat. With most faiths, most of the ephemera is dross or ways to make your in crowd recognize each other. One thing the successful faiths all have in common, though, is that they teach behavioral patterns IRL that help their societies work harmoniously. Those that don't, like the Branch Davidians, go buh-bye.
I would be a fool if I said that atheists don't have a code of conduct that keeps them out of jail and pursuing their happiness. I just don't know any atheists, which is why I posed the question a page or two ago.
All you're really saying is that, historically, there's been an observable correlation between ethical ideas and organized religion. This is certainly true, but only because, historically, religious frameworks tend to be correlated with
ALL aspects of human experience and understanding, including ethics, history, biology, cosmology, eschatology, etc.
But this hasn't prevented non-religious pursuits into any of these fields. Most of Aristotle's works, for example, which touched on ethics, biology, and cosmology, were, for all intents and purposes, pretty much secular.
And in the 21st century Western world, the scientific method has pretty much overshadowed a lot of the fields of knowledge religion used to lay claim to, such as cosmology and biology. But, since the scientific method isn't as readily applicable to something like ethics, it still remains a stronghold for organized religion. However, again, despite the observable correlation between ethical ideas and organized religion, many ethical systems have been developed apart from any religious context.
But I will certainly admit that religion remains an effective and efficient method for disseminating ethical systems to large amounts of people. If that is your only point, I agree with you.