Belief in God correlated with better mental health outcomes

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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Highlord Laan »

TimothyC wrote:
Steel wrote:This study ignores the fact that serious belief in magic is a mental health problem.
The goal of mental health treatment is often to help people function in society (at least in my experience). I would like your source for how having a belief in God decreases societal functioning.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westboro_Baptist_Church
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_sex_abuse_cases
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_fundamentalism

Want me to dig up a few more? Maybe find a way to weave them all into some sort of snarky debate form?
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

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Hey dude, if you want to roll with al-Qaeda, I'll roll with the two billion Muslims who are normal people. Religion is bad, m'kay, but sometimes it's just a framework for someone who is already an asshole.
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Broomstick »

General Zod wrote:Or. You could advocate digging deeper into the study to figure out what mechanisms are actually promoting this kind of benefit so you can figure out a way of applying it without the superstitious strings attached. Given we're talking about depression here it could be as simple as the fact that their religion gives them value and a sense of purpose.
Sure, by all means do that. In the meanwhile, though, we have people suffering. There's a long history of utilizing something that has been demonstrated to work even if the mechanism by which is works is not fully understood. "Use this for those for whom it will work" and "do more research" are not incompatible.
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Highlord Laan »

Broomstick wrote:
General Zod wrote:Or. You could advocate digging deeper into the study to figure out what mechanisms are actually promoting this kind of benefit so you can figure out a way of applying it without the superstitious strings attached. Given we're talking about depression here it could be as simple as the fact that their religion gives them value and a sense of purpose.
Sure, by all means do that. In the meanwhile, though, we have people suffering. There's a long history of utilizing something that has been demonstrated to work even if the mechanism by which is works is not fully understood. "Use this for those for whom it will work" and "do more research" are not incompatible.
Here however, it's a case of the "cure" being worse than the disease. Especially since all this does is reinforce the morons that are part of the problem.
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by General Zod »

Broomstick wrote:
General Zod wrote:Or. You could advocate digging deeper into the study to figure out what mechanisms are actually promoting this kind of benefit so you can figure out a way of applying it without the superstitious strings attached. Given we're talking about depression here it could be as simple as the fact that their religion gives them value and a sense of purpose.
Sure, by all means do that. In the meanwhile, though, we have people suffering. There's a long history of utilizing something that has been demonstrated to work even if the mechanism by which is works is not fully understood. "Use this for those for whom it will work" and "do more research" are not incompatible.
As long as you actually follow up with more research. Unfortunately some people are going to interpret this as a way they can justify manipulating the mentally vulnerable into converting to their particular flavor of kool-aid. If they have a relapse within a year or two of converting then you really haven't addressed the problem that made them depressed to begin with though, you just gave them a way to ignore it for a little while.
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Broomstick »

OK, I've tried to cook up an analogy for how I see all this. It's religion as a walking stick.

The vast majority of people don't need a walking stick to ambulate. For most, they can either forgo it entirely or they adopt it as a fashion statement of sorts, because having one is customary at some times and places. For some people it is a necessary crutch to enable them to walk about and get on with life. Now, in some cases, it is a temporary need (and for such people we should be seeking a more permanent cure) and for others, regrettably, we can't fix what's wrong so they'll need one for life. In such cases, depriving those people of their walking stick would be cruel. For yet other people - those who entirely missing a leg, as an example - a walking stick is not the answer in any way and they need something different (an artificial limb, or a pair of actual crutches, or a wheelchair, or whatever).

And yes, some brands of religion are highly toxic. Others, however, are more benign. While the batshit crazies will see this as an excuse to go on a recruiting campaign I hope that a responsible care provider would be thoughtful enough to direct their patients to the more benign forms of religion that are more tolerant of others and emphasize the positive (God loves you and wants you to be happy vs. we're all disgusting sinners and vile creatures, as one example).
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by General Zod »

Broomstick wrote: And yes, some brands of religion are highly toxic. Others, however, are more benign. While the batshit crazies will see this as an excuse to go on a recruiting campaign I hope that a responsible care provider would be thoughtful enough to direct their patients to the more benign forms of religion that are more tolerant of others and emphasize the positive (God loves you and wants you to be happy vs. we're all disgusting sinners and vile creatures, as one example).
Or you can come up with solutions that don't require a belief in magical sky pixies. This sounds a lot like the sort of thing Alcoholics Anonymous tries to do, and frankly they don't have a very good track record of success. Honestly as long as you're telling people that the long-term solution to their problem lies in something other than themselves I can't help but feel you're setting them up for failure.
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Zwinmar »

What it comes down to is religion, in many cases, is utilized as one big comfort blanket that is riddled by moth holes. The holes being feel good loopholes so they can justify being evil bastards to people who don't drink their specific brand of bull shit.
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Simon_Jester »

Highlord Laan wrote:
TimothyC wrote:
Steel wrote:This study ignores the fact that serious belief in magic is a mental health problem.
The goal of mental health treatment is often to help people function in society (at least in my experience). I would like your source for how having a belief in God decreases societal functioning.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westboro_Baptist_Church
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_sex_abuse_cases
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_fundamentalism

Want me to dig up a few more? Maybe find a way to weave them all into some sort of snarky debate form?
Fundies exist, therefore religion makes you crazy?
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Formless »

Broomstick wrote:
General Zod wrote:Or. You could advocate digging deeper into the study to figure out what mechanisms are actually promoting this kind of benefit so you can figure out a way of applying it without the superstitious strings attached. Given we're talking about depression here it could be as simple as the fact that their religion gives them value and a sense of purpose.
Sure, by all means do that. In the meanwhile, though, we have people suffering. There's a long history of utilizing something that has been demonstrated to work even if the mechanism by which is works is not fully understood. "Use this for those for whom it will work" and "do more research" are not incompatible.
It hasn't been demonstrated to work. Its a correlation and may simply be due to flawed sampling methods and measurement errors due to cultural assumptions by biased researchers. For all we know, the effect is a result of negative stigma against non-theists. What then?
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Highlord Laan »

Simon_Jester wrote:Fundies exist, therefore religion makes you crazy?
Actually, yes. It does. Because it leads directly to laws protecting shit like this and the opiate-addled hordes calling it a good thing.
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Broomstick »

General Zod wrote:Or you can come up with solutions that don't require a belief in magical sky pixies.
The thing is we don't know why there is a correlation here. Is it coincidence? Is it social bonding? Or do some people actually need a belief in a supernatural being looking out for them?
This sounds a lot like the sort of thing Alcoholics Anonymous tries to do, and frankly they don't have a very good track record of success.
No one has a good, long-term track record against addiction. I don't see why we should single out AA or NA as "bad" when no one else has a particularly good success rate, either.
Honestly as long as you're telling people that the long-term solution to their problem lies in something other than themselves I can't help but feel you're setting them up for failure.
If we were dealing with mentally healthy/normal people I might go along with that, but this study in particular looked at people with mental illness, that is, people who don't function normally. Nor does it seem to have followed anyone truly long term. Frankly, even short-term help for depression (as an example) may arguably be a good thing, and if someone requires something to maximize their long term functioning I don't think it should be denied to them even if it's not ideal. There are a lot of chronic, long term conditions that can't be cured, only managed. A diabetic might require insulin from "outside themselves" rather than produced by their own pancreas, and it's certainly not an ideal state, but if that is what someone requires to function then it shouldn't be denied to them.
Formless wrote:It hasn't been demonstrated to work. Its a correlation and may simply be due to flawed sampling methods and measurement errors due to cultural assumptions by biased researchers. For all we know, the effect is a result of negative stigma against non-theists. What then?
If participating in activities that reduces the stigma/bias felt by someone with mental illness relieves that mental illness what is wrong with that? Well, anything taken to excess can be a problem, of course, and there are some cults that are outright toxic, but if, for example, attending a mainstream and relatively liberal group on a weekly basis helps a mentally ill person what, really, is the downside?

Yes, it would be wonderful if reason and logic could cure mental ills but you know what? Most people aren't that reasonable or logical. They aren't. Largely due to cultural conditioning I suspect, but there they are. It's no use to say "oh, with a better upbringing they could do X or Y" because we have to deal with people as they actually are, not as how we want them to be.
A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. Leonard Nimoy.

Now I did a job. I got nothing but trouble since I did it, not to mention more than a few unkind words as regard to my character so let me make this abundantly clear. I do the job. And then I get paid.- Malcolm Reynolds, Captain of Serenity, which sums up my feelings regarding the lawsuit discussed here.

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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Simon_Jester »

Highlord Laan wrote:
Simon_Jester wrote:Fundies exist, therefore religion makes you crazy?
Actually, yes. It does. Because it leads directly to laws protecting shit like this and the opiate-addled hordes calling it a good thing.
That is not logical.

"Religion makes that person over there crazy" is not the same as "religion makes people, generically, crazy." Which is in turn a very different animal from "religion is inherently a mental illness."

It's ignorant and arrogant to assume that religion is an automatic crazy-maker, since we can easily point to billions of examples of it simply not doing that, at all. For any rigorous definition of insanity, religion does not make people crazy. People are quite capable of being crazy on their own, with or without religious intervention.

Does religion shield and promote certain things that we can call crazy (like killing your children?) Yes. So do a lot of things. If I wanted to make a list of all the things in American society that promote, encourage, or shelter insane behaviors, and make insanity more common and likely, it would be a long list.

So are we going to flip out and get judgmental every time some person who is already ill finds consolation and relief from a source that has caused other people, at other times and places, to be evil or foolish?
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by General Zod »

Broomstick wrote: No one has a good, long-term track record against addiction. I don't see why we should single out AA or NA as "bad" when no one else has a particularly good success rate, either.
That's kind of the point. The long-term success rate with AA is roughly on par with people who get better all on their own without any sort of "intervention", even though their short-term rate is good. I don't see why you think this would somehow be better.
If we were dealing with mentally healthy/normal people I might go along with that, but this study in particular looked at people with mental illness, that is, people who don't function normally. Nor does it seem to have followed anyone truly long term. Frankly, even short-term help for depression (as an example) may arguably be a good thing, and if someone requires something to maximize their long term functioning I don't think it should be denied to them even if it's not ideal. There are a lot of chronic, long term conditions that can't be cured, only managed.
I'm not saying we should deny people anything. I'm saying you shouldn't try to shove square pegs into round holes. Look at it this way. If someone's a homophobe, do you think that you can help them get over it by taking them out to a gay bar during jock-strap night?
A diabetic might require insulin from "outside themselves" rather than produced by their own pancreas, and it's certainly not an ideal state, but if that is what someone requires to function then it shouldn't be denied to them.
How is diabetes relevant? It's not a mental illness and doesn't function even remotely the same. But basically, I'm not saying that everyone can figure out how to cure their problems on their own. I'm saying that the best a psychiatrist can do is show a person what they need to do in order to get better.
Yes, it would be wonderful if reason and logic could cure mental ills but you know what? Most people aren't that reasonable or logical. They aren't. Largely due to cultural conditioning I suspect, but there they are. It's no use to say "oh, with a better upbringing they could do X or Y" because we have to deal with people as they actually are, not as how we want them to be.
You can't cure mental illnesses through rational argument, but that doesn't mean that you can't understand how they work on a rational level and then apply emotional cues and responses to help someone deal with it.
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Broomstick »

General Zod wrote:
Broomstick wrote:No one has a good, long-term track record against addiction. I don't see why we should single out AA or NA as "bad" when no one else has a particularly good success rate, either.
That's kind of the point. The long-term success rate with AA is roughly on par with people who get better all on their own without any sort of "intervention", even though their short-term rate is good. I don't see why you think this would somehow be better.
Do you have support for your contention that no treatment at all is as good as what treatment we currently have?

Also, since it is very rare for anyone to resist addiction long-term and life for addicts, at best, is usually periods of sobriety interrupted by relapses for the duration of their lives, short-term assistance may have the benefit of increasing total sober time and minimizing total drunk/drugged time.
General Zod wrote:I'm not saying we should deny people anything. I'm saying you shouldn't try to shove square pegs into round holes. Look at it this way. If someone's a homophobe, do you think that you can help them get over it by taking them out to a gay bar during jock-strap night?
Is anyone here suggestion inflicting religion on atheists? Where? Who? IF religion is beneficial in some cases it's an option, not a mandate. This study on it's own shows that the correlation is not absolute and only found in a sub-set of the affected population. If someone is ammenable to religion to start with then it might help them. If someone is utterly opposed to religion then no, I see no reason to suggest it.
A diabetic might require insulin from "outside themselves" rather than produced by their own pancreas, and it's certainly not an ideal state, but if that is what someone requires to function then it shouldn't be denied to them.
How is diabetes relevant? It's not a mental illness and doesn't function even remotely the same.
If mental illness is due to a lack of a normally present brain chemical yes, it is relevant (which is not to say that's the cause of ALL mental illness). It's an analogy, not an exact correspondence, does this really need to be explained to people here?
But basically, I'm not saying that everyone can figure out how to cure their problems on their own. I'm saying that the best a psychiatrist can do is show a person what they need to do in order to get better.
IF religion is shown to benefit a subset of the affected population (let's say 30% as a WAG) then a psychiatrist would be remiss NOT to mention or suggest it if the patient in front of him or her is a member of that subset.
Yes, it would be wonderful if reason and logic could cure mental ills but you know what? Most people aren't that reasonable or logical. They aren't. Largely due to cultural conditioning I suspect, but there they are. It's no use to say "oh, with a better upbringing they could do X or Y" because we have to deal with people as they actually are, not as how we want them to be.
You can't cure mental illnesses through rational argument, but that doesn't mean that you can't understand how they work on a rational level and
then apply emotional cues and responses to help someone deal with it.
Right... and IF some types of religion can apply those "emotional cues and responses" then why would you continue to object to it for that subset of affected people it can potentially benefit? Note that is not applying it everyone, but to the group that could benefit from it. Why object? Because you find religion distasteful or potentially harmful? Chemotherapy or surgery are also distasteful and potentially harmful but for a select number of problems they are a viable solution.
A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. Leonard Nimoy.

Now I did a job. I got nothing but trouble since I did it, not to mention more than a few unkind words as regard to my character so let me make this abundantly clear. I do the job. And then I get paid.- Malcolm Reynolds, Captain of Serenity, which sums up my feelings regarding the lawsuit discussed here.

If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich. - John F. Kennedy

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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Flagg »

Simon_Jester wrote:
Highlord Laan wrote:
Simon_Jester wrote:Fundies exist, therefore religion makes you crazy?
Actually, yes. It does. Because it leads directly to laws protecting shit like this and the opiate-addled hordes calling it a good thing.
That is not logical.

"Religion makes that person over there crazy" is not the same as "religion makes people, generically, crazy." Which is in turn a very different animal from "religion is inherently a mental illness."

It's ignorant and arrogant to assume that religion is an automatic crazy-maker, since we can easily point to billions of examples of it simply not doing that, at all. For any rigorous definition of insanity, religion does not make people crazy. People are quite capable of being crazy on their own, with or without religious intervention.

Does religion shield and promote certain things that we can call crazy (like killing your children?) Yes. So do a lot of things. If I wanted to make a list of all the things in American society that promote, encourage, or shelter insane behaviors, and make insanity more common and likely, it would be a long list.

So are we going to flip out and get judgmental every time some person who is already ill finds consolation and relief from a source that has caused other people, at other times and places, to be evil or foolish?
Simon, you illiterate slut. The point was that religion tolerates shit the fundies do.
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Formless »

Broomstick wrote:If participating in activities that reduces the stigma/bias felt by someone with mental illness relieves that mental illness what is wrong with that?
What's wrong with that? What the hell is wrong with you? You can't force someone to believe in anything, bitch. That's what you are arguing here-- every religion asks you to believe in something, and condemns practitioners who are insincere. This would be like telling a depressed bisexual who is upset about homophobic bullies to stop porking partners of the same sex. Sure, they can change their behavior and do in fact enjoy heterosexual relationships. But they shouldn't be required to placate bigoted assholes. Do you see the analogy? The responsibility for stigmatizing this behavior lies with the assholes, not with the victims.
Yes, it would be wonderful if reason and logic could cure mental ills but you know what? Most people aren't that reasonable or logical. They aren't. Largely due to cultural conditioning I suspect, but there they are. It's no use to say "oh, with a better upbringing they could do X or Y" because we have to deal with people as they actually are, not as how we want them to be.
Let me go over this again: Rational-Emotive therapy and Cognitive Behavioral therapy, which are both designed to help with depression (when we aren't just slapping bandages on the problem with SSRIs), are both designed to address this exact deficiency in logic that so often leads to unreasonable pessimism about living. Granted, its less about arguing with the patient than teaching them, but still: those skills can be taught. Professional psychologists and psychiatrists spent the better parts of their careers developing these methods and they wouldn't do that if they thought it didn't work. Those opinions are informed by clinical practice. What are yours based on?
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Broomstick »

Formless wrote:
Broomstick wrote:If participating in activities that reduces the stigma/bias felt by someone with mental illness relieves that mental illness what is wrong with that?
What's wrong with that? What the hell is wrong with you? You can't force someone to believe in anything, bitch. That's what you are arguing here-- every religion asks you to believe in something, and condemns practitioners who are insincere.
EVERY religion, or mainly the monotheistic Abrahamic ones? Does Buddhism "condemn" the less than perfect believers? Do the various Hindu cult gods advocate persecuting someone who worships Shiva as opposed to Krishna?

Nowhere am I advocating anyone being FORCED to believe anything! Where the hell do you get that from? IF someone was, for example, raised Lutheran and still has some leaning in that direction mentioning that some people find becoming involved in church is not going to bring the world to a screeching halt. I'm not advocating rounding people up for forced conversions, where the fuck do you get that from?
Sure, they can change their behavior and do in fact enjoy heterosexual relationships. But they shouldn't be required to placate bigoted assholes. Do you see the analogy? The responsibility for stigmatizing this behavior lies with the assholes, not with the victims.
If the main social interactions of a group are via the religion then cutting yourself off from religion also cuts yourself off from society. It's nothing new that some people attend church functions solely for the social aspects and aren't firm believers. They go through the motions, as it were. Hell, among Jews it's nothing unusual for full blown atheists to nonetheless engage in the ritual motions to remain engaged in their cultural community, facilitated by the fact that for many types of Judaism the important thing is following the rituals rather than adhering to a strict version of dogma. (Of course not all Jews do this - isn't personal choice wonderful?)

Of course, if you judge all religion solely by Christianity or Islam you'll have wrong-headed notions of the full range of religions. If your experience of life is solely in major urban centers you won't understand just how church-centered life in a small, rural community can be. Or perhaps you advocate uprooting depressed rural people and forcing them to live in urban centers for their own good?
Yes, it would be wonderful if reason and logic could cure mental ills but you know what? Most people aren't that reasonable or logical. They aren't. Largely due to cultural conditioning I suspect, but there they are. It's no use to say "oh, with a better upbringing they could do X or Y" because we have to deal with people as they actually are, not as how we want them to be.
Let me go over this again: Rational-Emotive therapy and Cognitive Behavioral therapy, which are both designed to help with depression (when we aren't just slapping bandages on the problem with SSRIs), are both designed to address this exact deficiency in logic that so often leads to unreasonable pessimism about living. Granted, its less about arguing with the patient than teaching them, but still: those skills can be taught. Professional psychologists and psychiatrists spent the better parts of their careers developing these methods and they wouldn't do that if they thought it didn't work. Those opinions are informed by clinical practice. What are yours based on?
In the OP there is referenced a study that shows a correlation between religious involvement and improved mental health in a subset of the population. Are you rejecting those results because you have a bias against religion such that you will reject scientific evidence that it may be a positive in some situations?

Perhaps you failed to notice how often I have used the word "if" or "IF" in this thread. I am not, actually, stating any universal truths. This whole discussion was started by a study that I think raises interesting questions as well as exposing prejudice in many posters here. If you were actually rational about the results of that one study you wouldn't be so upset and angry about it.

I will also point out that neither RET or CBT are effective in all cases of depression. They will not, for example, help very much for a biochemically based depression. They won't be terribly helpful for someone whose life is truly full of suck that can't be fixed. Sometimes people have very good reasons to feel bad - perhaps they are crippled with a chronic illness that can't be cured, in pain, impoverished, and old. How the hell would being rational about their situation help? Objectively their situation sucks donkey balls. IF such a person found that participating in a religion alleviated some of their despair what the hell is the problem there?

The examples of religion thrown up here are the most extreme forms, the hateful and hating forms that advocate oppressing others. Is that the religion the study participants were involved in, or some other form? Because if they weren't involved in the extremist forms then holding up those forms as an example of how religion is bad is bullshit in regards to the referenced study.

That's why I asked in my very first post here if some of the benefits of religious participation were the social interactions. That's a hugely important question to ask. It would also bring in factors of ethnicity in some cases. It's almost impossible to be involved in Jewish communities without at least going though the motions, as one example. Steering Jewish patients away from all aspects of religious life means forcing them to assimilate. Would that be a good thing? That's hardly the only group where culture and religion are intertwined. But hey, just ignore all that, everyone should be forced to adhere to the mainstream culture no matter how ill the fit. It's wrong to force people to convert to your belief system unless you're an atheist, then it's mandatory to force them to see the way you do or you can dismiss them as crazy - is that really the stance you want to take?
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Jub »

When you peel back the layers religion does nothing that a secular alternative couldn't, and when you see this you understand that you can no longer defend religion. Everything good that religion does can be replicated and that means that on balance religion is a bad thing that is either actively bad or simply turns a blind eye to the issues. Example: Not all Catholics support the church stance on condoms and AIDS in Africa, yet their tithes and support for the church still fuel this abhorrent behavior thus making them just as guilty as the people causing the harm.
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Formless »

Broomstick wrote:EVERY religion, or mainly the monotheistic Abrahamic ones? Does Buddhism "condemn" the less than perfect believers? Do the various Hindu cult gods advocate persecuting someone who worships Shiva as opposed to Krishna?
In case you didn't know, there is a centuries long history of violent conflict in the Punjab between Hindu and Muslim factions, motivated by religious differences. Islam is intolerant of Hinduism because of its polytheism, and Hinduism is rigid to the point of violence about its caste system; whereas Islam does not prejudice against converts based on their birth. And while Bhuddism has a deserved reputation for being relatively peaceful, it isn't squeaky clean either. Look no further than Imperial Japan.
Nowhere am I advocating anyone being FORCED to believe anything! Where the hell do you get that from?
Its called "context".
Formless wrote:For all we know, the effect is a result of negative stigma against non-theists. What then?
Broomstick wrote:If participating in activities that reduces the stigma/bias felt by someone with mental illness relieves that mental illness what is wrong with that?
Either your response is completely irrelevant to the point I was making, or it sounds like you are saying "do like AA and advocate explicitly faith based therapy". In context, the latter is borderline offensive. It doesn't matter how "liberal" the group is, if its religious then that's non-starter for irreligious (or religiously diverse) patients and would have obvious downsides if there is a stigma at play.
If the main social interactions of a group are via the religion then cutting yourself off from religion also cuts yourself off from society. It's nothing new that some people attend church functions solely for the social aspects and aren't firm believers. They go through the motions, as it were.
Let me explain something to you: I have been there, done that, and I cannot stand to do it anymore. The church sickens me on a routine basis. Most atheists who have since gone to church for whatever reason can probably concur that its an unpleasant experience to be preached at and be surrounded by drooling idiots. The point is, you aren't cutting yourself off from society, that's just your indoctrination talking. You're doing the very sane thing and cutting an unpleasant part of society out of your life.

Shut the fuck up about things you clearly don't understand.
Broomstick wrote:
Formless wrote:
Broomstick wrote:Yes, it would be wonderful if reason and logic could cure mental ills but you know what? Most people aren't that reasonable or logical. They aren't.
Let me go over this again: Rational-Emotive therapy and Cognitive Behavioral therapy, which are both designed to help with depression (when we aren't just slapping bandages on the problem with SSRIs), are both designed to address this exact deficiency in logic that so often leads to unreasonable pessimism about living. Granted, its less about arguing with the patient than teaching them, but still: those skills can be taught. Professional psychologists and psychiatrists spent the better parts of their careers developing these methods and they wouldn't do that if they thought it didn't work. Those opinions are informed by clinical practice. What are yours based on?
In the OP there is referenced a study that shows a correlation between religious involvement and improved mental health in a subset of the population. Are you rejecting those results because you have a bias against religion such that you will reject scientific evidence that it may be a positive in some situations?
You are dodging the question. You made a claim about the futility of logic in the context of psychotherapy. I want to know what qualifications or data you have to dismiss therapy styles that contradict those assumptions.
I will also point out that neither RET or CBT are effective in all cases of depression. They will not, for example, help very much for a biochemically based depression.
Biochemical imbalance appears to be part of all clinical depression. Yet you will find many professionals who lament the overuse of SSRIs precisely because they don't deal with the psychological aspects of the problem, thus devaluing them. The fear is that drugs are a short term fix applied to a long term if not life long problem.
They won't be terribly helpful for someone whose life is truly full of suck that can't be fixed. [...] How the hell would being rational about their situation help? Objectively their situation sucks donkey balls. IF such a person found that participating in a religion alleviated some of their despair what the hell is the problem there?
Being rational helps because its good to know that it really isn't your fault that the economy is bad and your kid has leukemia. People in our capitalist, individualistic society are conditioned to take responsibility for those thing on themselves even when its NOT appropriate to do so. All depression is triggered by stress, but a healthy response and a pathological response are distinguishable nonetheless.

As for the religious aspect, as an Atheist I must point out that this is how religions exploit people when their lives are at their lowest point. Other people brought up radical Islam already: who do you think is easier to radicalize and turn into a suicide bomber? Someone who has a supportive family in a first world country, or someone whose house was bombed in Iraq and has no one left to live for but Allah? Yes, its an extreme example, but an illustrative one. Cults are another great example. I for one do not like the idea of offering false hopes of divine salvation on the premise of a short term correlation with better mental health.
That's why I asked in my very first post here if some of the benefits of religious participation were the social interactions. That's a hugely important question to ask. It would also bring in factors of ethnicity in some cases. It's almost impossible to be involved in Jewish communities without at least going though the motions, as one example. Steering Jewish patients away from all aspects of religious life means forcing them to assimilate. Would that be a good thing? That's hardly the only group where culture and religion are intertwined. But hey, just ignore all that, everyone should be forced to adhere to the mainstream culture no matter how ill the fit. It's wrong to force people to convert to your belief system unless you're an atheist, then it's mandatory to force them to see the way you do or you can dismiss them as crazy - is that really the stance you want to take?
No one is advocating any of this... except you towards atheists. :roll:

Cultural sensitivity apparently only applies when you are in a dominant social category.
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Broomstick »

Formless wrote:
Broomstick wrote:EVERY religion, or mainly the monotheistic Abrahamic ones? Does Buddhism "condemn" the less than perfect believers? Do the various Hindu cult gods advocate persecuting someone who worships Shiva as opposed to Krishna?
In case you didn't know, there is a centuries long history of violent conflict in the Punjab between Hindu and Muslim factions, motivated by religious differences. Islam is intolerant of Hinduism because of its polytheism, and Hinduism is rigid to the point of violence about its caste system; whereas Islam does not prejudice against converts based on their birth. And while Bhuddism has a deserved reputation for being relatively peaceful, it isn't squeaky clean either. Look no further than Imperial Japan.
Actually, I'd have given Tibet as an example of Buddism gone nasty, but whatever. And I explicitly made the comparison between two Hindu sects rather than Hindu vs. some other group. I can't help but think a large part of the Hindu/Muslim conflict is due the mandate in Islam to convert or to kill which understandably generates hostility in those targeted.

But we're getting off on a tangent.
Nowhere am I advocating anyone being FORCED to believe anything! Where the hell do you get that from?
Its called "context".
Formless wrote:For all we know, the effect is a result of negative stigma against non-theists. What then?
Broomstick wrote:If participating in activities that reduces the stigma/bias felt by someone with mental illness relieves that mental illness what is wrong with that?
Either your response is completely irrelevant to the point I was making, or it sounds like you are saying "do like AA and advocate explicitly faith based therapy". In context, the latter is borderline offensive. It doesn't matter how "liberal" the group is, if its religious then that's non-starter for irreligious (or religiously diverse) patients and would have obvious downsides if there is a stigma at play.
Are you saying, then, that assimilation is always bad? We should never, ever let someone go along with the mainstream, even if they feel better by doing so?

Again, nowhere here am I speaking of coercion. Forcing someone to act straight when they're gay would be bad because it's coercive. Allowing someone to join a club when they want to join is NOT coercive. Nowhere do I advocate forced conversion, unlike those here advocating "deprogramming" everyone without exception from their religion whether that person wants to be "set free" or not.
If the main social interactions of a group are via the religion then cutting yourself off from religion also cuts yourself off from society. It's nothing new that some people attend church functions solely for the social aspects and aren't firm believers. They go through the motions, as it were.
Let me explain something to you: I have been there, done that, and I cannot stand to do it anymore.
YOU can not stand to do that any more but you do not speak for everyone. I worked for over a decade with a Jewish atheist who nonetheless continued to engage in various rituals when with his family because it was his choice to do that. I've known a couple of former Christians who didn't believe but who nonetheless found solace in the familiar ceremonies when there was a death of a loved one. None of that bothers me, why should you get so upset at someone else's choice? They have their reasons for following certain customs even if they don't believe the myths.
The church sickens me on a routine basis.
Then I fully support your choice to avoid any and all forms of church.
Most atheists who have since gone to church for whatever reason can probably concur that its an unpleasant experience to be preached at and be surrounded by drooling idiots.
Again, you are operating from a background that assumes all religions are intent upon proselytizing and quashing everything but a very strict party line. I, too, am repelled by that but the difference is that I know that not all religion is of that form.
The point is, you aren't cutting yourself off from society, that's just your indoctrination talking.
My indoctrination? I was raised by atheists. Maybe that's why I don't get so outraged, I never had a church to reject. I never had to worry about my family rejecting me for non-belief.

Being raised wholly outside a religion (aside from highly secularized forms of certain holidays and what exposure I got from the extended family, which was maybe once or twice a year) I actually have felt isolated from the larger society for much of my life. You may reject religion, but you were a part of that fabric once. I was never in it growing up. Probably a very different experience than most "converts" to atheism, more in line with a 2nd or 3rd generation atheist.
Shut the fuck up about things you clearly don't understand.
Stop trying to speak for everyone. Even as an atheist your personal experience is not universal.
You are dodging the question. You made a claim about the futility of logic in the context of psychotherapy. I want to know what qualifications or data you have to dismiss therapy styles that contradict those assumptions.
Ah, the argument that if one does not have a degree or advanced training in a subject one is not qualified to participate even in an idle discussion of the same. Isn't that a variant of arguing from authority?
I will also point out that neither RET or CBT are effective in all cases of depression. They will not, for example, help very much for a biochemically based depression.
Biochemical imbalance appears to be part of all clinical depression. Yet you will find many professionals who lament the overuse of SSRIs precisely because they don't deal with the psychological aspects of the problem, thus devaluing them. The fear is that drugs are a short term fix applied to a long term if not life long problem.
The problem is that some people are naturally in various brain chemicals and some reach that state through environmental influence. If it's an environmental problem then a long term cure requires changing the environment. If it's intrinsic then the person will be depressed in even the best of environments. The problem, of course, is that these days all depression is treated as intrinsic, and the people making those decisions are also disregarding the utility of everything outside of SSRI's because pills are easy.

The ideal is that the treatment should be tailored to the individual. Again, IF a subset of people could benefit from religious participation then they certainly shouldn't be discouraged from such participation, and it should be on the table. Again, tailored to the individual which would NOT mean forced indoctrination in any form. For an atheist secular alternatives would be a better alternative. Not everyone is an atheist, though, and people should not be forced into non-belief any more than they should be forced in belief, with the caveat that the beliefs/non-beliefs not be something that actually impairs functioning. In other words not every delusion needs to be ripped out by the roots, particularly if doing so would cause harm in itself.
They won't be terribly helpful for someone whose life is truly full of suck that can't be fixed. [...] How the hell would being rational about their situation help? Objectively their situation sucks donkey balls. IF such a person found that participating in a religion alleviated some of their despair what the hell is the problem there?
Being rational helps because its good to know that it really isn't your fault that the economy is bad and your kid has leukemia.
Where does religion mandate that there has to be fault?, at least fault in humans? If someone takes comfort in thinking that there is some master plan where it makes sense that you don't have a job and your kid is dying I think it's nuts but I'm not going to deny them that crumb of comfort provided it doesn't interfere with their ability to function as a human being. I have strong issues with the attitude of doing nothing because Jesus will come down and fix it all you just have to wait because it paralyzes people. I don't have a problem with an attitude god sends trials to believers so they can prove how strong they are by bearing all these crosses. I don't agree with it but some people will find such a "test" a challenge to step up to the task.

Likewise, if someone is dying and finds comfort in their religion I'm not going to take that away. Why would I? What purpose would that serve? How would that alleviate suffering?
People in our capitalist, individualistic society are conditioned to take responsibility for those thing on themselves even when its NOT appropriate to do so. All depression is triggered by stress, but a healthy response and a pathological response are distinguishable nonetheless.
US society is also strongly influenced by Calvinism and its taint of predestination which doesn't help matters.
Cults are another great example.
All religions are cults.
I for one do not like the idea of offering false hopes of divine salvation on the premise of a short term correlation with better mental health.
Not all religions offer salvation - Buddism has the ideal of oblivion, not heaven, as an example. Again, you are using the Abrahamic (and I'm guessing Christian) template as a universal when it is not.
No one is advocating any of this... except you towards atheists. :roll:
I'm not mandating any atheist converting to any religion whatsoever. I just find it offensive when atheists are as rabidly intent on forced conversations as anyone else.
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Highlord Laan »

Broomstick, while you may not be talking of forced conversions, the truth of virtually every religion socially accepted in the US is that they are. Not just forcing the individual, and in this discussion individuals that are already in a weakened state, to follow their beliefs, but instilling the idea that it's perfectly fine for them to do the same thing, because "spreading the word" is part of the belief, and it makes them feel good. So passing it on and making others feel good is good too, right?

"Here man, this will make you feel great. In fact, you'll feel so good you'll want to keep it doing more!" Sound familiar?

And every religion is based on fault. Especially christianity, which given it's prevalence and power in the US, makes it number one on the list.
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by TimothyC »

Highlord Laan wrote:Broomstick, while you may not be talking of forced conversions, the truth of virtually every religion socially accepted in the US is that they are. Not just forcing the individual, and in this discussion individuals that are already in a weakened state, to follow their beliefs, but instilling the idea that it's perfectly fine for them to do the same thing, because "spreading the word" is part of the belief, and it makes them feel good. So passing it on and making others feel good is good too, right?

"Here man, this will make you feel great. In fact, you'll feel so good you'll want to keep it doing more!" Sound familiar?

And every religion is based on fault. Especially christianity, which given it's prevalence and power in the US, makes it number one on the list.
If that's your idea of a "Forced Conversion" then I strongly suggest you read up on what happens to Christians in majority Muslim countries (such as Egypt) or in the Inquisition to Jews. I'd follow that by a recalibration of your vocabulary to something that is more accepted by the rest of the population of this board.
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Ziggy Stardust »

Highlord Laan wrote: Actually, yes. It does. Because it leads directly to laws protecting shit like this and the opiate-addled hordes calling it a good thing.
Opiate-addled hordes? Take your tin-foil hat off.

Also, since you apparently think that only vague anecdotal hand-waiving counts as evidence, take a look a THIS news story.

OH NO! Veganism makes you CRAAAAAZZZZY!! We should outlaw veganism before they mind-wash the opiate-addled hordes into tofu overdoses and derp derp derp derp derp. What? What's that you say? There will always be criminally stupid and negligent morons in the world no matter what heavy-handed efforts at social control and forcing people to think like dumb Internet trolls we decide to implement? And that the solution to fundamentalism DOESN'T lie in sweeping generalizations and masturbating to pseudo-fascist fantasies? No, that's not true, you are just OPIATE-ADDLED! VEGANS must be bootheeled!

EDIT:

Oh, and I am also going to post a link to this Wikipedia article. I'd like you to read it. I'd like you to understand the terrible actions involved in that incident, which I am sure you have at least heard of before considering its infamy. Then I would like you to think about the fact that the "religion" involved, the Peoples Temple, was only founded about 20 years before the mass suicide. I would like you to take this fact, and the additional assurance that although this is an abnormally bad example it is far from the only instance of modern cults acting in a like way, and consider how this information interacts with your desire to brutally crush established religions. Go on, I can wait. Do you think bootheeling Pat Robertson and burning down the Vatican will put a permanent end to this sort of activity?
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Re: Belief in God correlated with better mental health outco

Post by Flagg »

Ziggy Stardust wrote:
Highlord Laan wrote: Actually, yes. It does. Because it leads directly to laws protecting shit like this and the opiate-addled hordes calling it a good thing.
Opiate-addled hordes? Take your tin-foil hat off.

Also, since you apparently think that only vague anecdotal hand-waiving counts as evidence, take a look a THIS news story.

OH NO! Veganism makes you CRAAAAAZZZZY!! We should outlaw veganism before they mind-wash the opiate-addled hordes into tofu overdoses and derp derp derp derp derp. What? What's that you say? There will always be criminally stupid and negligent morons in the world no matter what heavy-handed efforts at social control and forcing people to think like dumb Internet trolls we decide to implement? And that the solution to fundamentalism DOESN'T lie in sweeping generalizations and masturbating to pseudo-fascist fantasies? No, that's not true, you are just OPIATE-ADDLED! VEGANS must be bootheeled!
Hey dipshit, when we get a ton of stories of vegans killing their kids through neglect while being protected by law and blowing people up based on veganism you might have a point. Right now you're just a flailing shortbus resident.
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