zompist wrote: ↑Sat Aug 17, 2024 12:01 am
Travis B. wrote: ↑Fri Aug 16, 2024 10:55 pm
zompist wrote: ↑Fri Aug 16, 2024 6:48 pm
Most of these religions have no deep interest in being "right." That is, what you're atheist about is Christianity in particular. Which is fine, but "Christianity" is not the same as "religion."
I get that classical religions often engaged in things such as
interpretatio graeca and ancient peoples often identified pantheons with peoples, identified other people's gods with their own gods, and saw them as intercompatible. You still see this today with things such as the multitude of Hindu sects and how Buddhism coexists with Daoism, Shintoism, and Chinese folk religion. You also see things such as how Jews make no claim to Judaism being universal in any fashion. Yet at the same time, all of these make claims about the world and the universe which are at some level or another incompatible, so they can't all be "right", even if some of these coexist.
The same can be said about philosophies, or politics, or fandoms. Are the Cubs more worthy of support than the Mets, is Chicago pizza better than New York pizza? Are you quite sure that a preference for Odin over Zeus, or Shiva over Vishnu, is more of a "claim about the world" than these?
A believer in Odin is more likely to believe that the world is atop Yggrasil than a believer in Zeus, who would believe in no such world-tree, and conversely a believer in Zeus is more likely to place a special significance on Mount Olympus than a believer in Odin, for whom it would be just another mountain.
zompist wrote: ↑Sat Aug 17, 2024 12:01 am
You rightly note that religions are not viewed as separate things in East Asia. It'd be more accurate though to say that ordinary people think and act that way... if you're an actual Buddhist priest you are not likely to also be a Daoist priest.
It depends; for centuries Buddhism and Shintoism in Japan were highly syncretistic (e.g. there would be temples that had both Buddhist and Shinto shrines on their grounds), and the idea that they were really separate was an innovation brought about by Japanese nationalism encouraged by the Meiji restoration.
zompist wrote: ↑Sat Aug 17, 2024 12:01 am
Disagreements may be important (i.e. different from convictions about pizza) without really being resolvable. Centrists, liberals, progressives, and communists "can't all be 'right'", and yet all might agree on electing Kamala Harris.
At the same time, there are disagreements which are fundamental and which cannot be overlooked, such as whether Muhammad is the final prophet.
zompist wrote: ↑Sat Aug 17, 2024 12:01 am
one still has to choose beliefs to believe in if one does not have any religious beliefs,
This strikes me as another "atheist-reacting-to-Christianity" belief. Because Christianity is a proselytizing religion which puts great emphasis on conversion and changing people's beliefs, so do Christian-derived atheisms. Both Christians and atheists are apt to go on and on about how they became such through some personal process.
But surely only a fraction of people are, so to speak, in the market for a new belief system. In fact one of the advantages of a belief system (I'm borrowing this idea from Marvin Minsky) is that it settles such futile questions, freeing a person up to do something more useful.
BTW, I miswrote what I said; what I meant was that one still has to choose beliefs if one does not have no religious beliefs.
To me, about "futile questions", that to me sounds like some people cannot accept that some things either have answers that cannot be known, or do not have answers in the first place. I get that many people want to have some kind of answer, but that mean choosing that some answers are right and some answers, necessarily, are not right.
Personally, while I am an atheist, I have no way of claiming that there
isn't a Christian god, or a Zeus, or an Odin, or a Shiva, or a Vishnu, or so on; these are things that are intrinsically unknowable. Hence for me the best choice is to not choose. Some would call me an agnostic as a result, and to be precise I identify as an
agnostic atheist, because I believe that any god or gods are unknowable, and I have seen nothing that would make me believe in any particular god or gods, and I refuse to believe in any of them for this exact reason.
zompist wrote: ↑Sat Aug 17, 2024 12:01 am
And yes, one may believe in certain beliefs because they are traditionally associated with one's ethnoreligious group, but that is still a choice.
Not as interesting a one as is often thought, though. Many people are atheists because their parents or other influences are. And many are atheists because of a very predictable reaction against those people being Christians!
One could argue that I am an atheist because my parents are atheists. They raised me free of religion, but at the same time never told me to
not believe in any religion (and indeed as a teenager my sister would go to church on Sundays with one of her friends). They only told me they were atheists when I was an adult, but at the same time I knew my family was not religious growing up without them telling me. I myself only realized I was an atheist in middle school, even though as early as elementary school I always felt weird about things like how kids would come into school with ash crosses on the foreheads on Ash Wednesday and I did not.
Conversely, my mother is an atheist specifically because she was raised in Catholicism, and rejected it. There is a clear contrast between me and my mother in this regard; my mother specifically opposes religion and Catholicism in particular (aside from celebrating Christmas and Easter in their secularized forms), while I frankly don't care about what other people choose to believe or not believe, as long as they don't impose their beliefs on others.