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Ramblings on false beliefs

Religion, Superstition and Pseudoscience: Introduction

The amazing thing about religion is the gullibility that it demands. The religious person must believe things that he reads, or that he is told, without giving any consideration to whether those things are true or not. How would the remainder of our lives go if we applied the same rule?

If I said that God has spoken to me your reaction would most likely be scepticism; who am I that God would speak to me? I must hasten to say that I don't believe that God has spoken to me; but I want you to think about the idea that some people have claimed that God has spoken to them or to others.

If you belong to one of the faiths 'of the Book' - Judaism, Christianity and Islam - you would believe that God spoke to various prophets in times past, and that those prophets recorded God's words and commands, and that you must obey those commands.

On what evidence do you base that belief?

How can anyone ever know that God spoke to him? Even more, how can anyone ever know that God spoke to some other person?

  • Take it on trust?
  • It's in the Torah (or Bible or Koran), therefore it must be true?
  • Many people tell me it's true? (I like the Chinese proverb: "If a thousand people say a foolish thing, it is still a foolish thing".)
We cannot know for sure that God has spoken to anyone. Then there is the question of, how can we know that the people who collected up the texts in the Bible did not make errors? The question of 'Who wrote the Bible?' is considered elsewhere on this page.

If we look at the question with an open mind we can see that there is no supportable justification for believing what is written in our 'holy' books.

If our world can be explained by application of the scientific method and by applying logical reasoning, what need is there for religion? Either our world is susceptible to scientific investigation or it is not. Those who hold the latter must have difficulty with the success science has had explaining how the world works. One could hold that parts of the world are the realm of science and other parts are the realm of religion. In that case I suggest that the realm of religion is becoming ever smaller.

Questions that have been thought of as outside the realm of science have been such as:

  1. How should we live?
  2. How should we treat other people?
  3. Is there life after death?
  4. Is there a god or gods?
With the rise of global problems such as ozone depletion and greenhouse/climate change, which are very susceptible to scientific investigation, I believe we are beginning to see science-based answers to even these questions.
  1. We must live sustainably or suffer the consequences that science has made plain.
  2. We must treat other people as we would like them to treat us because scientific investigation has shown that we have reached the limits of the Earth's carrying capacity and we are "all in the same boat".
  3. Science has shown that the concept of the immortal soul is meaningless.
  4. It has generally been taken that the basis of religion is the existence of a god or gods. What meaning can any religion have if the concept of an immortal soul is unsustainable? What purpose does the concept of a god serve if everything in the Universe seems to be explainable by science and there is no life after death?
Belief in old religions, and their out-dated 'moral' teachings, distract people from the real and pressing needs of the modern world. "Why do anything about greenhouse/climate change if God is in charge and has his grand plan?"

Irrational beliefs are common

We think of ourselves as rational beings, but at this time when science has reached enormous heights, so called 'new age' beliefs are rife. Belief in astrology and in the efficacy of many forms of medicine not supported by valid evidence is common. I will not even attempt to list the irrational beliefs that are common in the early twenty-first century, but the greatest class of irrational belief is the religion delusion.

Those who call themselves Christian Scientists take as a premise the literal truth of the Bible and pick and choose those scientific discoveries that seem to support their case, while trying to discredit any science or scientist that, they feel, opposes them or their beliefs. Those who call themselves Intelligent Creationists similarly take it as true that God created life and then look for evidence supporting their case. These people try to legitimise their beliefs by linking them to science, but at the same time they remove the basis of science - an open mind.

Think about it; anyone who bases their life on a belief for which they have no evidence can, with justification, be thought either very foolish or even mad.

Contents

on this page...
Christian intolerance
Voluntary euthanasia
Religion is a superstition
Reward and punishment in religion
Religion compared to a virus
Miserable religion
The desire for a father figure
Bible: who wrote it?
Creation science
Where is God?
Index

On other pages...
The Bible
Is God real?
Immortal soul
Islam's threat
Divining
This page was created about September 2001; modified 2009/07/29
Contact: email daveclarkecb@yahoo.com

A question to the People of the Book (Jews, Christians, Moslems)

What sort of an omnipotent god would allow all the evil of the last thousand years while making no serious attempt to communicate truth, right, and ethics to Mankind?
Flying spaghetti monster
The Flying Spaghetti Monster is just as valid a god as is the God of the Christians. Similarly, Bertrand Russell proposed a china teapot in solar orbit between Earth and Mars; just as impossible to prove or disprove at the time as was the existence of God.

Chinese proverb

There is a Chinese proverb, "If a thousand people say a foolish thing it is still a foolish thing".

A billion Christians say they know how to get to paradise; a billion Muslims say they have the answers and the Christians have got it wrong. They are all saying a foolish thing.

The Christian Right brought us George W. Bush

Statistically the strongest predictor on how US citizens vote is their religion. If there were fewer irrational Christians in the USA the world would have been spared Bush II and quite possibly the Iraq war. The USA might now (2008) be responsibly dealing with its excessive greenhouse gas emissions.
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Christian intolerance

Since Martin Luther started the Lutheran Church and broke away from the Catholic Church there have been many other people and groups forming branches of the Christian religion. Why are there no break-away Christian groups, other than the Eastern Orthodox, that date back from the institutionisation of Christianity by Emperor Theodosius around 390AD to 1517 when Luther produced his 95 Theses? This is a period of over 1100 years.

There are no surviving break-away groups because the groups that did break-away were sooner or later ruthlessly forced back into the main-stream, with the authorities often using torture or execution for those who resisted. They were called heretics and were forced to believe, or at least to pretend to believe, the same as the dominent group. The early Church eradicated many so-called heresies, including Docetism, Montanism, Adoptionism, Sabellianism, Arianism, Pelagianism, and Gnosticism.

The Cathari was a major break-away branch of Christianity that flourished in western Europe in the 12th and 13th centuries; they were persecuted into extinction over a period of several hundred years.

It is recorded that Justinian I (AD527-565) of the Eastern Roman Empire extirpated various heresies in an effort to make the Eastern Church more compatible with the Western Church.

After Martin Luther there were wars in Europe between Protestants and Catholics for hundreds of years, each group trying to force their beliefs onto the other. Many of those who migrated to the New World did so to escape religious persecution.






Christians force their beliefs onto the general community by making voluntary euthanasia illegal

In the modern world most laws aim at keeping the peace and making people treat each other fairly. There are some laws, however, that are forced on all the people of vareous nations by Christian lobby groups and are based on Christian dogma rather than ethics.

Few people would believe it ethical to keep an animal alive if it was in great pain and suffering from an incurable disease or terribly injured. What is the point in prolonging life in that situation? It amounts to cruelty, and in many countries anybody keeping an animal alive in great pain could be prosecuted for mistreating the animal. Many people - the great majority in my country, Australia - feel that if they were in that position they should have the right to ask that their life should be ended.

Few countries allow people the legal right to have their life ended rather than suffer intollerable pain or mental deterioration. There is no ethical justification for this prohibition, it is purely due to Christian biggots forcing their beliefs onto the remainder of the population.

Christians should have the right to die in great and prolonged pain if that is what they want, but they have no right to force it onto anyone else. John Stuart Mill argued famously in On Liberty,

"The only part of the conduct of any one, for which [a citizen] is amenable to society, is that which concerns others. In the part which merely concerns himself, his independence is, of right, absolute. Over himself, over his own body and mind, the individual is sovereign."
... or should be!

I have written on this point in its specific application to Australia elsewhere.

The prohibition of abortion in many cases is similarly due to Christians forcing their beliefs onto others.






Religion is a superstition

The greatest of the self deceptions, religion, is so widely accepted that it is rarely classed as a superstition at all. In the past religion has served two main purposes: it provided an explanation for the way the world is, and it provided a father figure for Man.

It is in the nature of people to look for an explanation, to want to understand. In the distant past one can imagine people wondering why prey animals were easier to find one year than the next, why a usually reliable edible root plant was in short supply some years or in some areas, why rains were plentiful sometimes, scarce other times, excessive occasionally. Some things they would have been able to understand: in an excessively cold year many prey animals were found dead (it was reasonable to suppose the cold had killed them, just as it could kill a person exposed to the cold); in another year the wet season rains were sparse and wild wheat was also scarce (it was easy to see that wheat needed soil water in order to grow).

Many other observations would not come with explanations: how could a plant come from a seed? - surely there must be some great and wonderful process involved here; what caused diseases? - fellow humans sometimes caused harm to each other, could diseases be caused by humans with supernatural powers, or by some sort of humanoid spirit? Wherever they went the Sun would be there every day and disappear every night; it obviously must be very big, very far away, very powerful. What could move a thing so big and powerful, or was the Sun itself alive? The stars moved across the sky each night; what power moved them? What caused the wind to blow and storms to come? The concept of a god, or a pantheon of gods, could explain a great many otherwise unexplainable observations.

From our earliest memories we (most of us) have had authority figures to protect us, provide for us and make the hard decisions. In our infancies probably our greatest insecurities involve fear of losing our parents. It can be a shock to realise, on becoming an adult, that we have to make our own decisions. Some of us use a god to fill the role of a father figure so that we never have to take full responsibility for our own actions.

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Reward and punishment in religion

In at least the Judeo-Christian-Islamic group of religions adherents are lead to believe that God will hand out justice in the next life; we will be punished or rewarded for our behaviour in this life after we have died.

Anyone who has successfully raised a child or trained a dog will be aware of the need for feedback. The child is rewarded with a kind word when it does something we approve of and growled at when it deserves our disapproval; the dog is given a small food treat when it successfully understands and obeys a command, and is admonished when it breaks the rules.

The need for, and purpose of, this is obvious - feedback. The child or the dog is continually reminded that when it does wrong it meats with disapproval, whenever it does good that good is rewarded.

Yet in religion we must believe that God doesn't ever give us any feedback. We have to take it on faith that people like Hitler and Stalin, who caused enormous misery and death on earth, received their just rewards after their own deaths, and we have to believe, without evidence, that the good people of the past have been rewarded in Heaven. Wouldn't God's purpose be much better served if he informed us of the justice that was actually handed out to people who we knew, or knew of, in the afterlife? Wouldn't he achieve his purpose much better if he handed out reward and punishment soon after the deeds that called for judgement? It seems, if he exists, he doesn't know much about human behaviour.

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Religion compared to a virus

There are similarities between religion and a contagious disease such as those caused by viruses.
  1. A virus is forced by its genes to reproduce. If a religion is to be successful it too must reproduce (spread).
  2. People can 'catch' a religion from those around them and then pass it on to others; the similarity to a virus here is obvious. A successful religion is highly contagious. Its adherents actively try to convert others. It has a message that is appealing and often gives hope for a better life (quite probably after death). The adherents of several religions have actively forced people to convert a number of times in history.
  3. The most successful religions get a strong grip on their adherents from several angles: fear of punishment, hope for reward, and the provision of a father figure. Those who have long belonged to a religion are terrified when they begin to doubt because they are threatened with damnation (or other punishment in the afterlife or later incarnations). The most successful viruses use various means to avoid being overrun by the body's defences, they might periodically change features of their outer coating so that they are difficult to recognize, they might mutate frequently (the common cold, for example), so that immunity to one cold doesn't stop you catching the next version. Both viruses and religions have developed ways to stop people from defending themselves against infection.
  4. The most successful religions, like the most successful diseases, don't do their hosts a lot of harm. A disease that quickly kills its victims is not likely to be passed on. Similarly, a religion that required all children to be sacrificed, or universal celibacy, could not last. The most successful religions allow most of their adherents to live a pretty 'normal' life. Again, the common cold is a good example, it thrives in its numerous hosts, but kills very few.
  5. Computer viruses are not so clever as religions. There is obviously no advantage in having a virus in your computer. If someone created a virus that did come with advantages, then it would be much more likely to spread. If a virus has only disadvantages and can be recognised then we can crush it. If a religion had only disadvantages we would not adopt it.
  6. Viruses must breed to be successful. Religions often encourage their adhearents to have many children and discourage abortion and family planning.
Memes are ideas, methods, or skills that we learn from each other; most of them are useful, even valuable. In a sense they are heritable, like genes, we discover them and pass them on to acquantences and to later generations. Religion is a parasitic meme, a meme that uses the gulability of humans to hold onto its adherents and to spread to others.
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Why is religion miserable?

 
Monkey bench
Dog bench
The photos on the right show several of the animal benches at Kek Lok Si Buddhist temple in Georgetown, Malaysia.

They show a humour that is entirely missing in the Religions of the Book (Judaism, Christianity and Islam). I cannot imagine benches like these outside of a Christian church, even less a Muslim mosque.

The Religions of the Book seem obsessed with sin, punishment and fear of God. Humour has no place in them.

If one must believe religious clap-trap Buddhism is at least a happier form of delusion.






The desire for a father (or mother) figure

When we are young most of us can go to our parents if we are unsure of something, if we need advice, or if we feel inadequate for some challenge. As we grow up we take on more responsibility for our own welfare, we become more independent; but I suspect that the desire to have a mentor or protector to whom we can go to when life is hard or complex remains in most of us for a very long time, perhaps all our lives. Similarly, we would sometimes like to avoid having to make hard decisions on our own, we would prefer to have someone in higher authority, someone who we know has our best interests at heart, make the hard decisions for us - and, importantly, accept the responsibility for those decisions. God serves these father-figure purposes for many people.

So belief in, and submission to, a god can be a way of 'passing the buck', of being able to say, "It was not my decision, I followed God's dictates". What then, if there is no god, or if your god happens to be the wrong one (only one faith, at most, can be correct)? Then the believer is trying to pass responsibility for critically important decisions onto ideas written centuries ago by people who were fundamentally in error in their main premise!






Who wrote the Bible?

There is a long history of arguments about what writings should be accepted as Christian scripture. People involved include Melito (2nd century), Origen (2nd and 3rd century), Athanasius (4th century), Jerome and Augustine (4th & 5th century). The subject seems to have gone quiet during the dark ages, but then re-emerged in the renaissance and reformation especially among the newly emerged Protestant faiths.

Curiously, the great majority of twentieth century Christians seem willing to accept the bible that their particular branch of the faith provides them with, as it stands, without question. It is accepted as true, or even "God's Word", because someone, they don't know whom, has passed it on to them as such. A remarkable demonstration of apathy and/or naivete!

I think this point is worth repeating; the Bible is accepted by the great majority of Christians as coming from God because someone, or many people, have told them that it did!

"If a thousand people say a foolish thing, it is still a foolish thing." Chinese proverb

Questions that are rarely asked by Christians, and yet are fundamental, are:

  • Who decided what writings went into the Bible?
  • On what grounds were some writings accepted and others rejected?
  • When were these decisions made?
  • Should they ever be reviewed?
How can intelligent human beings accept the Bible as the Word of God – and base their lives on it – without asking, and finding adequate answers to, these questions?

The undeniable fact is that the Bible was written by people. Some Christians may well claim that these people had divine guidance, but still, the Bible was written by people. Did other people decide which writers were guided by God, and which weren't; and include or exclude writings accordingly? Did they too have divine guidance? In what form did this divine guidance come? How can we know that it was divine? Did God provide more and surer guidance in ancient times than he does now? Why?

A few modern Christians have asked probing questions. Ian Wilson discusses the evidence for the existence and 'divinity' of Jesus in an objective way in his interesting and well written book, 'Jesus: The Evidence'.

Also see Atheism Central.

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Creation science
(Intelligent design by another name)

Science is the application of the scientific method. A definition of the scientific method goes something like this:
  1. An observation, or more likely a series of observations, are made;
  2. An hypothesis is produced, that, supposing it to be true, would explain the observation(s);
  3. Experiments are devised to test the hypothesis;
  4. If the experiments fail to disprove the hypothesis then it can become a scientific theory.
Note that the theory need not be proven (usually it cannot be proven), but every test that it passes increases its standing. A hypothesis that cannot be tested is considered to be of dubious value.

Creation 'science' is different. Its adherents hold the belief that biblical creation happened. From there they look for evidence that seems to support their belief and ignore evidence that tends to contradict their dogma.

The term 'creation science' is an oxymoron. Either one believes in creation as described in the Bible, or one believes that the scientific method can be used to inform us about how the world came to be the way it is and how it works. One cannot accept, unquestioningly, Biblical creation, and believe that the world is amenable to scientific investigation.

Either the universe can be understood by using observation and reasoning or God is running it and it is intrinsically incapable of being explained by reason. Either there are causes and effects that we can understand by learning rules and laws, or not. It seems to me that science has explained an enormous amount of how the universe works; I see no reason to believe that the theory of evolution should be discarded in favour of 'creation science'.

'Intelligent design' is a similar belief to Creation science. It also looks for and considers only the evidence that is favourable to the preconceptions of its adherents. See also the third and equally valid alternative to science, Flying Spaghetti Monsterism.

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Where is God?

A thousand years ago people assumed that God and Heaven were somewhere up above us, hence the use of the term 'the heavens' for the realm of astronomy. They also imagined that Hell was down in 'the bowells of the Earth' somewhere.

Astronomy has shown no trace of Heaven or some home for God in the heavens, and geology has shown us that there is no Hell down beneath our feet.

So where is God? Where are we to believe that our souls go after we die? Some sort of fairyland?

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Index

Home

On this page...
Bible: who wrote it?
Christian intolerance
Creation science
Flying Spagetti Monster
Introduction
Meme
Miserable religion
Religion compared to a virus
Religion is a superstition
Reward and punishment in religion
The desire for a father figure
Top
Voluntary euthanasia
Where is God?

Another question concerning religion and genocide is discussed under Genocide on my page on the Bigger Picture.
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