November 3, 2014

Religious Attitude

The Rivers of Belief
The Rivers of Belief (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Religious attitude is nothing more than holding our beliefs - personal or collective, sound or unsound, such as God, free will, humanism, even kindness - as a general truth. That is to say, we are religious as long as we let our beliefs govern our reasoning.

10 comments:

  1. I like your definition, yunyi. You seem to be equating a "religious attitude" with egoism, assuming that what is true for oneself must also be true for everyone else.

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    1. That's exactly what I am trying to say. I also found it's actually very hard to get out of this trap of "egoism".

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  2. In most cases, religion is already selected for you when you are born and hence has every chance to mould the impressionable mind of a child. At its roots, religion is a tool of social control. Its greatest strength is also its greatest weakness: rigidity of rules. As for your conclusion, not everything religious is bogus. It may be an unparalleled force in providing solace to many a hurting soul.

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    1. Great point Uma! I think faith is very important, or probably the most important drive for our survival purpose. Reason is a luxury, as it almost completely has nothing to do with our practical life.

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    2. And I think it is precisely because of reason's non practical nature, it sees the real truth, which not many people can stand to look at it!

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  3. You are asking a very interesting question. A question that we don't always like to answer, at least, not in public. I am a scientist, and have never have trouble saying that I believe in God. For me religion means to believe and trust; reasoning is not essential.

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    1. Thanks Marina Silva to share your view. I think believing in God can coexist with reason, as long as they both stay in their own places.

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  4. Religion or belief of whatever is what we hold on to as a guide. For me it's not compulsory or binding. In my life I have experienced events and people that have made look at things differently. Insight and wisdom can be gained true different ways. Following a book or strict set of rules simply won't work for me because I am uniquely stubborn and have my own way of thinking. However I am open to whatever the truth might be but they better be convincing because I not accepting of truth without evidence. Until then I hold on to the religion instilled upon me by my parents and take from it what works for me.

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