Better the illusions that exalt us ......

There seems to be an implicit notion that the term religion implies something 'divine', which for whatever reason needs to be 'pleased'. I don't know why such an entity has to enter the discussion. Personally I don't believe in deities except as psychological constructs.

I will give a few definitions and a few of my premises in advance, in hope of reducing the confusion.

From Wikipedia:


A religion is a set of beliefs and practices, often centered upon specific supernatural and moral claims about reality, the cosmos, and human nature, and often codified as prayer, ritual, and religious law. Religion also encompasses ancestral or cultural traditions, writings, history, and mythology, as well as personal faith and mystic experience. The term "religion" refers to both the personal practices related to communal faith and to group rituals and communication stemming from shared conviction.

As such it is a part of a societies cultural inheritance. And likely the most effective vector for the transmission of ethical values, and an effective mean to have them converge. Ethical values are not absolute. A nomadic shortage society is likely to develop a different ethical framework than an urban affluent society.

Whether a deity or a general guiding principle factually exists isn't very important, because I believe that people don't act upon reality, but upon a map of reality, which is formed by their perceptions and beliefs. A deity or a guiding principle does not need to have any factual existence to affect the map. It is sufficient that someone beliefs in it.

The map doesn't need to be a perfect mapping of reality either. It is sufficient if it allows the user to navigate the area of it's application without detrimental effects compared to a perfect map. Most people will for example never experience any problems with the belief that atomic nuclei are held together by the holy spirit.

Exaltation can be understood on a personal level as a feeling of exaltation, which would act as positive reinforcement. I am assuming here that feeling exalted is enjoyable. It can also be understood in a framework of social ethics as a development towards an ethical ideal. I am using it in the latter sense.

What prompted me in other discussions to ask for opinions about the 'illusions that exalt us' was an apparent tendency to discard anything, that isn't based on observation or deduction from observations.

Possible alternative sources for cognition include religion, but could also be Myths or even Science Fiction. Religions as an alternate source for cognitions have the slight advantage , that parts of the cognitions derived from them have already been empirically tested in a social environment.

What does this have to do with science, though? Carl Sagan used the power of the beauty of language in the spreading of his memes, and his methods weren't incredibly different than Martin Luther King. I wouldn't call him a "preacher", but at the very least he sought to educate and put beauty to simple scientific ideas, as well as his personal ideals and his own dreams of perhaps achieving contact with alien life.

Illusions and beliefs are by definition not observable. Their effects are only observable if they are assumed to be true and acted upon. A typical example of this would be the belief 'All men are created equal'. In it's pertinent quality for this discussion, it isn't different to any belief in a deity- To be effective it needs to be accepted as a consentual truth. With the idea of equality and the idea of non-violence, we have two examples of unfounded beliefs, which became 'true' enough, to have normative power in a society und which are recognized as good and valuable. In the case of 'All men are created equal', it is often even referred to as self-evident. But again, they weren't effective in themselves. They had to be believed to cause any observable effect in society.

In my experience beliefs that aren't already carried over from childhood are more easily accepted in exceptional mental states. The most common mean for transmitting information between humans is language, which is why i hold it to be important. The most common mean to arouse emotions is language too. As opposed to scientists, preachers, poets and other purporters of beliefs have a tradition in the use of language for this purpose.

Society was changed for the better, but not innately because of Martin Luther King's preaching. You talk about context and needing to know details, well if all you see are MLK's words, you fail to understand the overall context. Society was changed for the better not just because his words were pretty, but because innately we all agree with his overall message;

I certainly agree with it. Being born and socialized not only into a democracy, but into a nation that suffered a kind of national trauma stemming from a lost war under a regime which denied said premise, it is a belief as firmly held by me, as the belief in a paternal deity is held by a devout catholic. But I don't think it was that common place for most of european history. I don't see anything intrinsic to human nature, that says 'All men are created equal'.

This isn't just a chicken and the egg scenario, this has become a "is a chicken an egg?" scenario. Even if the idea first started as a religious principle, that doesn't make anyone that follows a similar idea to be following an innately religious principle. Those who engage in nonviolence protest do not have to believe in God or some spiritual entity in order to enact it out, so I don't quite get the point of calling it innately a "religious principle". If you want to regard it as that, that's just fine, but pardon me if I'm not very interested.

I did not claim this. I claimed that religion, fiction,legends and dreams are valid sources of potentially good and valuable cognitions, the mentioned 'Illusions that exalt us', and asked for opinions on this subject.

I did not claim that you have to believe any arbitrary nonsense, because you can find something valuable in a religion, and I certainly did not introduce any deities in this thread. I did imply though that I would consider it wrong to discard religions as sources of cognition, because you have for example a grudge with an imaginary paternal deity.

I called it a religious principle, because the vector of transmission was religious. I would accept american transcendentalsim as a religious source too, if vedic religions aren't satisfactory, but given that Thoreau was a big fan of vedic scriptures, the distinction seems kind of moot.



But I have to ask: If an illusion is pursued, in order to please the divine... instead of out of genuine love for mankind, and genuine desire to better mankind... who exactly is being exalted? And what keeps others, claiming the same love for the same divine, from leading you to a path that can easily cause more harm than good to those that you would claim to exalt? If you embrace illusion over reality, then you cannot judge something on a merit other than that; the merits of illusion.

I am not sure whether I understand the question.
If you insist on a divine being that has to be pleased, we could adopt a christian framework. There i'd venture that pleasing God would be seen as a more exalting motivation than brotherly love from another belief. In this context an exaltation of God is by definition not possible, because as far as I understand it, God is already the highest and most perfect possible being in this frame of reference. A follower of God could be exalted by virtue of becoming a more faithful believer though.

What keeps you from causing harm is hopefully your critical faculty. You don't have to blindly follow any arbitrary commandment, if you can find something exalting in a religion.

The effects of your actions on the belief aren't dependent on the source though. It doesn't play a role whether you treat all men as equal to please the IPU or because you consider it to be beneficial for your genepool from some reasoning derived directly from the idea of cooperative genes.
 
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What prompted me in other discussions to ask for opinions about the 'illusions that exalt us' was an apparent tendency to discard anything, that isn't based on observation or deduction from observations.

This is a straw man. Who is doing this where. We discard illusions when we want the truth... we don't discard them for other values they might have.

The effects of your actions on the belief aren't dependent on the source though. It doesn't play a role whether you treat all men as equal to please the IPU or because you consider it to be beneficial for your genepool from some reasoning derived directly from the idea of cooperative genes.

It doesn't matter if you KNOW why you treat people well or not... just that you do. Do you think your dog needs to "learn" to treat it's owners well? You imagine that religion teaches these things... religions, government, cultures, parables, myths, and imitation, codifies these things via language... it hones them-- it describes them in human terms... but you seem to think that without religion there would not be moral behavior or exaltation or a secular government which declares "all men are created equal"--

There are good reasons why we should treat other humans well... we don't need to know these reasons to do so... we will do so if the people around us are doing so...

You have a straw man view of skeptics as nihilists discarding feeling willy-nilly. We discard it as a means for finding objective truths... because it has no method of error correction and is prone to bias and failure. Facts work better. But we have all the same feelings and values and exalting experiences-- without attributing it to magic. It may be even better and stronger and more moral than what comes from religion if you actually used evidence to test for it. You see value in religion that you don't see in other mythologies... and that you haven't conveyed well except in your head. And you see atheists discarding things that they aren't discarding something or other, but you haven't made a case for that. You are fuzzy and unclear.

You feel that religion is good and skeptics are discarding something... but you haven't conveyed what religion is good for or what skeptics are discarding. Where is your evidence. Or is this just your feeling and opinion and you are mad because we discard it as just a feeling and opinion?
 
And your apologetics is confusing blauregen... because critical thinking is the opposite of faith... the faithful aren't supposed to be "critically thinking" about god's word... afterall, it's "arrogant to try and understand the mind of god". Thinking and logic are not a big part of any religion... because it's the death blow to religion... religions need faith and magical thinking and mystery and fear and hope to keep themselves alive.

I just don't believe that you are actually a non believer. You don't follow the myth but you think that it's super duper that others are deluded. What other lies to you advocate telling people so that they can feel "exalted"?
 
Exaltation can be understood on a personal level as a feeling of exaltation, which would act as positive reinforcement. I am assuming here that feeling exalted is enjoyable. It can also be understood in a framework of social ethics as a development towards an ethical ideal. I am using it in the latter sense.

What prompted me in other discussions to ask for opinions about the 'illusions that exalt us' was an apparent tendency to discard anything, that isn't based on observation or deduction from observations.

Possible alternative sources for cognition include religion, but could also be Myths or even Science Fiction. Religions as an alternate source for cognitions have the slight advantage , that parts of the cognitions derived from them have already been empirically tested in a social environment.
Can you give an example of a cognition derived from religion that has been empirically tested in a social environment?

And if you are talking about exaltation as working towards an ethical idea you should realise that religion does not provide ethics or even a vector for ethical ideas.

In fact religion has a lot of trouble keeping up with the ethical development of society.
 
In terms of an exalting rationalistic world vision, I recommend Sam Harris, "The End of Faith." In it, he discusses at great length his vision of a science of good and evil/ethics and how religions are unhelpful, even destructive, in this regard. In essence, according to Harris we are all in the position to affect the happiness or suffering of others and as such we are obligated to turn our collective focus away from conflicting religious morality issues (which often have proven to increase rather than decrease human suffering), and onto improving the happiness and alleviating the suffering of other sentient beings. Very inspirational. Dawkins also recommends it.
The utilitarian ethics you describe is incompliant to the ideas of humanism, equal rights and so. It is just indefendable.

Consider the example of a sexual relation between a 9 yrs old girl and her adult pedophile sugar daddy. We might assume the relation lasts for quite some years and it turns out that the girl actually shows no indication of physical or psychological injury by the age of, say, 16, same as other girls in similar relations. The relation then slowly terminates because she's getting too old for her sugar daddy's taste.

Given the fact that the pedophile relation fosters the girl's development, allegely free from suffering, and it also increases happiness, certainly for one person, it aspires towards being regarded as a noble, desirable kind of relationship.

In a utilitarian world, at least.
 
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In a Muslim World it appears to be par for the course. I believe plenty of religions have offered up underage girls... without regard to how it might affect them. Who cares about the girls-- when its god's command?

And ethics and exaltation don't seem to keep the clergy from molesting the young ones either. I'm sure it's exalting fro the priests... not so much for the kids.
 
The utilitarian ethics you describe is incompliant to the ideas of humanism, equal rights and so. It is just indefendable.

Consider the example of a sexual relation between a 9 yrs old girl and her adult pedophile sugar daddy. We might assume the relation lasts for quite some years and it turns out that the girl actually shows no indication of physical or psychological injury by the age of, say, 16, same as other girls in similar relations. The relation then slowly terminates because she's getting too old for her sugar daddy's taste.

Given the fact that the pedophile relation fosters the girl's development, allegely free from suffering, and it also increases happiness, certainly for one person, it aspires towards being regarded as a very good, highly desirable kind of relationship.

In a utilitarian world, at least.
Whst an odd example. The psychological harm caused by paedophilia is well documented and very real.
 
Whst an odd example. The psychological harm caused by paedophilia is well documented and very real.
I'm sure you know what you're talking about.

Getting back to the point: if we assumed no harm was caused, we - as happiness-oriented utilitarians - would be certainly entitled to judge this pedophile relationship as ethically unobjectionable, wouldn't we?
 
Not necessarily a falsehood, but possibly an arbitrary idea because you agree with it despite a lack of proof.
There aren't any that I can think of - at least if you change the word "proof" to "evidence".

For example:
that all men are created equal


is hardly an objective and observable truth. Most medieval nobles would have considered the idea to be ridiculous, so I don't think it follows stringently out of some genetic imperative. Yet it is stated as self-evident, and i think a lot of the people here on this board would embrace it without supporting evidence.
Well, depending on how it's meant, I would likely agree with it. On the other hand, my some other meanings I don't. However, whatever interpretation we work with for those words, I think that my view is definitely based on the evidence we have available.

At the very least I think it's true that "almost all humans are born worthy of equal consideration".
Of course that's also capable of being interpretted in multiple ways - I'd have to write a lot more about it before my viewpoint was clear, but it's certainly an evidence based viewpoint.

Regarding the greater meaning of the thread - I think it's certainly true that we need more than science to find exaltation - we also need poets and their varients. But the source of their poetry, that which they use to show us big ideas, new hopes and dreams, can very easily be true things.
 
I'm sure you know what you're talking about.

Getting back to the point: if we assumed no harm was caused, we - as happiness-oriented utilitarians - would be certainly entitled to judge this pedophile relationship as ethically unobjectionable, wouldn't we?

So? What's your point?

If we assumed that everyone would go to heaven when they die, we could also judge that there was nothing wrong with murder. That's what happens when you argue with counter-factuals.
 
I'm sure you know what you're talking about.

Getting back to the point: if we assumed no harm was caused, we - as happiness-oriented utilitarians - would be certainly entitled to judge this pedophile relationship as ethically unobjectionable, wouldn't we?
No. Convenient assumptions are no basis for a system of ethics.
 
There seems to be an implicit notion that the term religion implies something 'divine', which for whatever reason needs to be 'pleased'. I don't know why such an entity has to enter the discussion. Personally I don't believe in deities except as psychological constructs.
Well personally I don't believe in deities either. But you're talking about religion and "illusions", praising the illusion as better as truths. Or else your entire opening post is null and void. Having an ideal alone is not an illusion, and thus, is negated by your opening post as a bad example.

All religions I'm familiar with do, indeed, have a deity, or at the very least the supernatural. A religion that is entirely 100% natural with no supernatural entities, I would say, would barely quantify as a religion at all.

I'd also add that I've made it explicitly clear that I have been mainly referring to mainstream religion. This includes Islam, Christianity, and Catholicism, which altogether, runs a number of believers in the billions. Certainly, if we want to question whether illusions are better than truths, shouldn't we deal with the largest illusions of them all?

I will give a few definitions and a few of my premises in advance, in hope of reducing the confusion.

From Wikipedia:



As such it is a part of a societies cultural inheritance. And likely the most effective vector for the transmission of ethical values, and an effective mean to have them converge. Ethical values are not absolute. A nomadic shortage society is likely to develop a different ethical framework than an urban affluent society.

Whether a deity or a general guiding principle factually exists isn't very important, because I believe that people don't act upon reality, but upon a map of reality, which is formed by their perceptions and beliefs. A deity or a guiding principle does not need to have any factual existence to affect the map. It is sufficient that someone beliefs in it.
Yet, the existence of deities affect the maps all the time. Look at what a decent majority of Americans find as "true", especially amongst the Evangelicals.

And defining religion away from the supernatural and into just a codified set of beliefs does not seem to get anywhere useful at all. In the mainstream use of the word, religion usually involves the supernatural. The only exception I can think of is Confucianism, which is more of a philosophy than a religion, but personally I would call it a code of ethics, a moral philosophy.

Exaltation can be understood on a personal level as a feeling of exaltation, which would act as positive reinforcement.
Yet there are ways to feel exalted outside of religious beliefs.

I am assuming here that feeling exalted is enjoyable. It can also be understood in a framework of social ethics as a development towards an ethical ideal. I am using it in the latter sense.
There are ways to develop towards an ethical ideal without "illusions".

What prompted me in other discussions to ask for opinions about the 'illusions that exalt us' was an apparent tendency to discard anything, that isn't based on observation or deduction from observations.
See, this is the thing. You wanted to ask for opinions about the "illusions that exalt us", but you're just spending way too much time justifying your question in the first place, and you seem to have gone way off topic from the original post.

We don't discard anything that isn't based on observation or deduction from observations. If we did, we wouldn't be watching fiction, or reading poetry, or listing the words of someone who's speech appealed to us.

However, when dealing with a claim of reality, then yes. There is a desire amongst skeptics to question whether or not it exists. If you want to go ahead and say that you believe that some invisible guy called God holds atoms together, that's fine, but you can't expect anyone to take your belief seriously. I can say that I believe that there's an invisible elf in my backyard, and I wouldn't expect you to take it seriously, unless I were actually insane, for instance.

If you want to make a logical argument as to what to do with my soul, don't I have the right to question the existence of the soul in the first place? Questioning claims of reality is actually what we need to do. Questioning claims of reality led to the scientific process, and got us from relying on childish assumptions that have been with the human race for thousands of years.

Possible alternative sources for cognition include religion, but could also be Myths or even Science Fiction.
To put it another way, let's say that we have Science Fiction. I have a lot of science fiction that I read and like.

Then let's say that someone comes up claiming that they have the power of the Jedi Lords. I'd point out that I'm skeptical. Should I let this person stick with his illusion, even if it could get him into danger (I.E., he actually goes through life acting like he can rely on his "force powers"?)

On the other hand, let's say that someone is very interested in science fiction, and thinks that we should go very extreme, like turning the entire world into Trantor. Well, what if I point out that this isn't economically or environmentally feasible, and that with an overloaded population base you'd have to deal with quite a few problems, including heat and feeding the population? I shouldn't just accept his dream with open arms and pursue it to the extreme, no matter how exalted it might make him feel.

Religions as an alternate source for cognitions have the slight advantage , that parts of the cognitions derived from them have already been empirically tested in a social environment.
Except that religion as an "alternate source of cognition" have never gotten humanity anywhere. Only through science have we truly learned about the world, the human body, and the human brain, even if our knowledge may not be complete yet.

I am not convinced that your "illusion" is worth anything at all.



Y'know, I could keep posting, but your post is just too darn long.

Why don't you find a way to touch upon your main important points, or find a way to summarize them so I can figure out just what the hell you're trying to say.

You seem to be doing a lot of justification for "illusions" and "exalt".

Personally, I see your definitions of exalted to be rather lacking, or using some of the less-used definitions of the word. For me, what is most important is this:

"to raise in estimation or rank; to magnify" -- The human race is not raised in estimation or rank, or magnified, in the majority of illusions I've ever seen.

"to intensify, heighten" -- same with this.

"to refine or concentrate, esp. by making more perfect" -- how are we made more perfect through illusions?
 
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The utilitarian ethics you describe is incompliant to the ideas of humanism, equal rights and so. It is just indefendable.

Consider the example of a sexual relation between a 9 yrs old girl and her adult pedophile sugar daddy. We might assume the relation lasts for quite some years and it turns out that the girl actually shows no indication of physical or psychological injury by the age of, say, 16, same as other girls in similar relations. The relation then slowly terminates because she's getting too old for her sugar daddy's taste.

Given the fact that the pedophile relation fosters the girl's development, allegely free from suffering, and it also increases happiness, certainly for one person, it aspires towards being regarded as a noble, desirable kind of relationship.

In a utilitarian world, at least.
Wow. This has to be the worst attempt I've ever seen in attempting to demonstrate the invalidity of a code of ethics.

The problem is that anyone halfway intelligent can see the harm involved, or at the very least would be familiar with the basic facts of child development and sexual molestation. There is no reason to "assume" that there is no harm, because there is clear evidence of harm from any amount of case studies.

So no, this failed completely.
 
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Religion is a tool of control. It can be used for evil or good purposes. But do we really need such a tool of control ? Are we better off with it than without it ?

Yes, that was a semantic error on my side. I used a definition of religion as 'a codified set of rules and practices', instead of ' the service and worship of God or the supernatural' .

I would have answered affirmative, because I don't think that people usually act rational, upon an objective reality and with the goal to benefit the comunity. A codified set of rules and practices helps in my opinion to achieve a convergence of the various interpretations of personal ethical rules. And I assume that a system based on beliefs regarding 'good' and 'evil' acts is more effective than one purely based on punishing misbehavior.

It doesn't have to involve the service and worship of God or the supernatural though. Any generally accepted moral-philosophy will do. A set of beliefs involving a parental figure seems to be easier accepted by most believers. I don't know why. Possibly because veneration of a parental figure involves a psychological regression to childhood.
 
Consider the example of a sexual relation between a 9 yrs old girl and her adult pedophile sugar daddy. We might assume the relation lasts for quite some years and it turns out that the girl actually shows no indication of physical or psychological injury by the age of, say, 16, same as other girls in similar relations. The relation then slowly terminates because she's getting too old for her sugar daddy's taste.

They get rid of you before 16. Most pedos who like pre-pubescents get rid of their "relationships" the moment they begin to develop breasts and pubic hair. None of my molesters bothered me after age 14.

Of course, the true extent of the damage I suffered didn't really show up until recently, and I'm now 49.

I really hate it when people, especially men, make hypotheticals like these. You frankly sound pretty ignorant to us survivors. And kind of creepy.

Sorry. I meant extremely creepy.
 
If I understand Blauregen correctly, he is disturbed by a perceived reductionism which sometimes seems to be evident on this board. This is something I have also seen and it bothers me too. In answer, many have pointed to the fact that here we are discussing only a part of our thinking and that in other areas we still pursue the "exaltation" we may find in poetry or fiction or even in politics or philosophy. And of course some here have elevated the wonder of science and the natural world as also inspiring: which it surely is.

It seems that most people do seek some form of "exaltation". The feeling I get from seeing the rainbow is different from, and unaffected by, any ability to predict where it will appear. ( I can't predict that, btw, but I could perhaps learn to do so). The resonance some poems have for me is killed by studying them: not enhanced. That may only be true for me but it is true for me. This kind of "exaltation" is part of the joy of life and I think without it we are the poorer.

Blauregen draws a distinction between this personal kind of exaltation and the kind of inspiration we take from cultural/ social/ political movements which have led to major shifts in our values at various time: dreams and illusions as he characterises them. It is quite interesting to me that the thread has again turned to discussing the abrahamic religions or even religion in general. This is a very familiar topic insofar as I have seen this board, and the same points are made again and again. Yet the relevance of this to the OP is a little obscure to me. Religion was mentioned as an example of the wider question: I did not take it as the theme. Perhaps I am wrong. For me the content of the OP was about the nature of such experiences and about their value for us as human beings.

Many times I have seen it argued that science cannot address the moral and ethical implications of its discoveries, nor be held responsible for the use made of them. One implication of this is often held to be that scientific freedom must be given a very high value, and that the cost of restricting research in certain areas is loss of valuable knowledge: what we do with that knowledge is not relevant in advance of the discovery. (Tom Lehrer's song about Werner von Braun comes to mind :)). I broadly agree with this view, though of course it is an illusion, since science is funded, and decisions are taken about what to fund. What is interesting is that it is an illusion of the type Blauregen is raising. An ideal, if you like. Freedom of research is not a scientific principle: it is quite an inspiring illusion. That it is untrue is not a reason to discard it as an ideal.

For me this is the essence of the OP. We seem to need to have "big ideals" and they are independent of objective truth as often put forward on this board as the highest, indeed the only worthwhile pursuit. It may be I am mischaracterising Blauregen but this is what I understood him to be saying. If it is what he is saying then I agree. We cannot escape the need for such ideals: pretending that we can approach the world purely through objective truth limits us in serious ways.
 
But nobody is saying that, Fiona. People might be hearing that... but all of us here have passions that drive us and experiences that move us... that uplift us... we just don't ascribe them to gods or "magic" or "supernatural". It doesn't take away anything to not think of a rainbow as a "sign" or a message or a gift from god. You don't appreciate it less. Skeptics don't take apart and analyze poems for their "objective truths". What people are objecting to is the idea that these things are from god or religion or only available to those who aren't skeptical. Skepticism is a tool used to understand the natural world. Religions tend to make claims about the natural world that aren't true. Skeptics have all the same feelings and experiences and depth of religious people... maybe even more... but they don't see it or need it to come from some "magical" realm.

You seem to be describing a stereotype of a skeptic... but no actual skeptics that I know. Or maybe because you believe in the stereotype... you exaggerate it when you see it and ignore the abundance of counter examples. You guys seem to hear things that aren't there in the words or motives of skeptics while imagining that they don't have or experience some feeling that you have or some other "spiritual" person has. This is because you believe that the "spiritual thing"-- be it poetry or being moved by a rainbow is not available to a skeptic... but I suspect I am moved to tears as often or more often than my religious peers-- it has nothing to do with religion.

Nobody is escaping the need for ideals... and nobody is approaching the world solely through objective means (your mischarachterization). You are seeing what isn't there. You are confirming a bias you have. But you have not supported it with evidence. When it comes to understanding the natural world and knowing what is objectively true and useful-- then science beats religion across the board on every area. Religions are endlessly making claims about what they do and what their value is and how all the good stuff comes from them-- but it's a lie. We just understand that emotions and feelings come from our brain... we evolved to feel to experience to be "exalted"-- it doesn't come from our religion... that is just something that has come in and takes the credit for all that is good and trains the faithful to imagine that the faithless don't have it. Some people may need to believe to feel "special" or exalted... but people who don't believe don't need that delusion.

Skeptics have passions and feelings and humor and love and ideals the same as theists or anybody else-- the faithful have just learned to blind themselves to it, it seems so that they can feel like they have something special due to faith.

We understand what you are saying. Do you understand that skeptics have all the same ideals and depths of feelings as the believing population but you keep assuming we don't with your language... as does Blauregen. It's insulting, and vague... because it's never based on anyone's actual words... just your vague extrapolation of "some people".

Yes, I am interested in what is objectively true. But I find some of the finest people I know in the skeptic community with every bit of "ideals" and "depth" and "poetic beauty" and more than in the believers. I like my feelings to be based on truths... not illusions or drugs or seizures or misperceptions. You may need those to feel whatever your most cherished feelings are-- but others truly do not. And you seem to have trouble imagining that they can feel the same depths as you.

I'm interested in knowing where this perception comes from. You and Blauregen and others keep repeating it as though it's a fact... so whose words have made you think that? And do you really think these people have less of "something" because they are skeptics. Can you cut and paste the words so we can examine it. Can you be more clear what you think we are missing. Principles and mottos and ideals are NOT illusions... nor are goals... nor passions... but it doesn't make them better when they are based on lies. These are human constructs. Skeptics are no less inspired than non-skeptics... they are just less dopey-sounding to me. Clearer. I mean, I can understand the exaltation one feels when a baby is born or the fates seem to smile upon them... I feel the same thing... but I don't imagine it as something "divine". I can appreciate wonder and awe without understanding "where or why" I feel it, also.

You are making vague claims ,but they aren't coherent. There is this idea that illusions are good... but the examples you give are not illusions. Religions are delusions... they are based on some divine truth for the most part. Delusions are rarely useful. And they certainly aren't necessary for leading a rich life. There is also this vague insinuation that atheists or skeptics are missing something.... but you can't even point coherently to what it is so we can see if it exists somewhere other than in your mind.

I keep trying to pinpoint or get the essence of what you are saying, but I can't get it through the straw men. Skeptics don't approach life objective... just the truth-- we approach that objectively. But we have feelings, opinions, passions, ideals, morals, values, etc. just like everyone else. And we don't need religion or a god to put them in us.
 
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See, this is the thing. You wanted to ask for opinions about the "illusions that exalt us", but you're just spending way too much time justifying your question in the first place, and you seem to have gone way off topic from the original post.

Yes. My initial question was answered in the first few posts. The hypothesis that the people on this board lack a vision was falsified and i got some brilliant and rousing rebuttals from dglas, slingblade and others. Again, thank you all.

The predominant ideology seems to be humanitarian. The 'illusions that exalt us', to use the term one last time, would in this case include human dignity. I can't find anything to object in this. I still believe that religion, due to the assciated emotions, the usually high social rank and authority of priests and possible other factors is the most effective carrier for ethical rules and practices, but I agree that any moralphilosophy could do the job as well.

The tangents regarding map<->territory-distinction, human action being based on a map instead of objective reality and that beliefs should be evaluated according to the benefit the believer and her environment derive from them, instead of their actual truthfullness, are parts of my personal set of belief and likely inappropriate for the JREF-Forum.

However, when dealing with a claim of reality, then yes. There is a desire amongst skeptics to question whether or not it exists. If you want to go ahead and say that you believe that some invisible guy called God holds atoms together, that's fine, but you can't expect anyone to take your belief seriously. I can say that I believe that there's an invisible elf in my backyard, and I wouldn't expect you to take it seriously, unless I were actually insane, for instance.

I agree. Unless your backyard elf would affect you or other people unduely negative, I would see no problem with the belief, though.

Then let's say that someone comes up claiming that they have the power of the Jedi Lords. I'd point out that I'm skeptical. Should I let this person stick with his illusion, even if it could get him into danger (I.E., he actually goes through life acting like he can rely on his "force powers"?)

I never met someone who claimed to have similar abilities and acted upon it. Usually they find a rationalization for why they do things the normal way. This hypothetical case would be clearly detrimental for the believer to a degree where it would far outweigh any possible benefit. I would likely intervene and try to get the person to see a specialist.

It would be more difficult if an otherwise sane adult person would refuse medical treatment for a fatal condition based on personal beliefs. I would argue with this person too, but I think I would respect her right of self-determination.

On the other hand, let's say that someone is very interested in science fiction, and thinks that we should go very extreme, like turning the entire world into Trantor. Well, what if I point out that this isn't economically or environmentally feasible, and that with an overloaded population base you'd have to deal with quite a few problems, including heat and feeding the population? I shouldn't just accept his dream with open arms and pursue it to the extreme, no matter how exalted it might make him feel.

I agree. I don't think such a proposal would pass a normal democratic process though.

Why don't you find a way to touch upon your main important points, or find a way to summarize them so I can figure out just what the hell you're trying to say.

No. My questions are more than sufficiently answered, and I have to thank you all for your effort. As far as I am concerned I am content to admit that you are right.
 
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I am not talking about religion, Articulett. And as it happens I see myself as a sceptic and I am certainly an atheist. You are hearing things that aren't there. Again. I resent it, to be frank
 

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