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#11 |
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I always thought the "cause" of religion was the need for man to fabricate explanations for the world around him. In primitive times in human history, man did not possess the scientific abilities that we have in the modern day. Back then, the best they could come up with is that the lightning from the sky, the sun moving through the sky, and all other natural phenomena were caused by supernatural beings--in essence, they created fairy tales to explain these mysteries. Of course, death certainly does have an influence.
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#12 | |
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If I could write a book I would argue the same thing and point out on the first page that within 20 years after abortion clinics became legal in N. America they were outnumbered by fertility clinics. This, of course, does not mean that these clinics are the problem but that the need for them is evidence that there is a problem. |
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#13 |
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IF you try some astronaut gravity machine thing, (youre in a seat and the thing spin super fast you know) and you faint, you might experience a NDE.
It is a very well known phenomena. Such a thing happen when the brain is in a need for oxygen (just like when you die, if you "die" it is just because your brain as no more blood to work...) and when you are under the effect of many Gs, your blood have problems going to your brain... Peoples are reported to have experienced the tunnel (the whole optic system panic in need of oxygen and send pulse to the brain traduced as rings, creating a tunnel. If youre tall and you stand up quickly, your brain will miss blood for a second creating some patterns in your sight, so what Im telling you about the tunnel is no fantasy) a LOT of times, and sometimes even hell and some lake of fire. But it is unlikely religion comes from that. |
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#14 |
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I don't think the OP intended to say that NDEs were the root cause of religion, but that gods and afterlives were invented to help people psychologically deal with death.
One of my Marine friends used to play a game when he was enlisted. It was called "dream world." Since Marines on a ship have little else to do except eat, sleep, lift weights, and clean guns, it can get boring. When it got boring enough, some of them would consent to being choked to the point on unconsciousness by their friends. After a few seconds or a minute, the person would wake up and tell about all the weird lights, dreams, visions, etc. they had while they were out. Hence "dream world." One time a guy didn't wake up for a very long while, and they were nearly charged with attempted murder - but I digress. So-called near death experiences have chemical causes, not supernatural. I think that should be pretty clear from the variety of circumstances that cause them, and the fact that the foremost symptom is lack of oxygen in brain cells. When people nearly die and are revived, they merely come closer to total brain death than those who merely pass out, so the experience is more intense. On another tack - Amos, I find your dislike of science to be disturbing. It's fine if you didn't like physics class in high school, but remember that we wouldn't have such comfortable lives and we wouldn't know so much about the universe were it not for science. The application of science is what you should be worried about, e.g. chemical/biological/nuclear weapons and other abuses of scientific knowledge. Don't hate the messenger. And the problem you imply with your abortion clinic analogy is a societal one, namely people are too dumb to use birth control, and not a problem arising from science. |
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#15 |
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An alternative explanation I've heard for the origin of belief in a soul or spirit is the simple observation of someone else dying. An animated body, upon death, ceases to be animate. All the things besides the physical that we formerly associated with that person are now gone. So what happened? Obviously, something left the body, something that previously animated it, and that something included everything non-physical that we identified with that person. What is that something? We don't see it, so it must be some invisible essence. Let's call it a spirit.
From the idea of an invisible spirit that leaves us at death would grow belief in some sort of afterlife, and thus different religions. God(s) could be added to the afterlife/religion at some later point. As far as religion goes, I think one plausible explanation is that its roots lie in magical beliefs and practices, which probably predated religious beliefs and practices. Magic as in some shaman that has the ability to control weather, crops, healing, etc., and including homeopathic (imitative) magic and Contagious magic (see Frazer's The Golden Bough for a classical discussion on the categories of Magic). Now, at some point, some smart shaman would get tired of being blamed for his or her magic failing (which it would do as often as not), or not want to risk being killed when his or her magic failed as was the previous shaman. So this shaman invents the idea of a god or gods to pass the blame off to. These gods may be the spirits of passed ancestors, or some thunder-god or such. Instead of directly trying to influence an event he or she is supposed to have the ability to control (such as the spring rains) using some magical method, this shaman says that there is some malevoltent spirit that actually controls the weather, and we (the tribe) need to appease this spirit if we want the rains to come (but not too much - we don't want a flood). If the rains don't come as planned, or we get a devastating flood, then, well, it's not the shaman's fault, someone in the tribe did something to piss this spirit off, or the 'ole guy is throwing another temper tantrum this year. |
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#16 | |
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But I like science and I am also not against abortion per se because it fills a need that has been created by our scientific revolution. I am just pointing at signs that may be seen as evidence of problems that are now in its infancy but that may become to big for us to handle later on. |
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#17 |
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How has the scientific revolution created a need for abortion? From the beginning of society there's always been the old crone with a twig to take care of unwanted potential mouths to feed. Modern medicine just makes abortion safer for the woman.
I'm curious as to what problems you see indicated by things like abortion. Mageth, that was an excellent explanation for the evolution of religion. |
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#18 | |
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This is not to say that divorce is wrong or anything like that. It is however true that if homosexuality is incarnate upon us and therefore legal (without my objection) and argument can be made that pedophelia should be made legal if only on the grounds that it is incarnate upon the person who also did not create himself and therefore is not in charge of his own sexual preference. If someday all these inequities are proven to be our predestined orientations the slippery slope will demand that all be made legal which now makes the offender a victim of society and should therefore be protected by society. Just my opinion, but since you asked . . . |
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#19 | |
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#20 | |
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I think you are trying to say that abortions of the past can't be true because then there would be no such thing as fidelity. Is that what you mean? If so, the conclusion does not follow the assumption. In some cases, an abortion could mean infidelity, but not all. And in no way does one infidelity abortion invalidate the other 9 billion people on the planet's option to practice fidelity or not. |
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