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by wumbo
756 days ago
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“some great value in religion” takes a long time of filtering through stories and metaphors to find the actual point. I get it, some lessons are hard to teach and it’s easier to present the framework of the lesson in a story, then people make connections as they grow. But you also have to consider all of the harmful misinterpretations that come with it. If most people come away from religion less ethical than nonreligious people, let’s see if we can take the good parts of the texts and throw the rest away. E.g. learning about mystical buddhism versus just going to therapy and breathing for a while. |
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How do you test that? You cannot do a double blind test because you cannot induce religion in people to order.
> let’s see if we can take the good parts of the texts and throw the rest away.
I do not think you can do that. Each religion is largely shaped by a few key ideas. Remove one of those and you change it radically (losing the good) remove anything else and you will not change anything significant.
You can reform and improve religions, but I think history shows that is not easy nor are the results predictable.
I think you over-emphasise the importance of texts to religions in general. Texts are the foundation of American evangelical Christianity and (to an extent I am worse equipped to judge) Islam, but much of Christianity and at least some schools of Buddhism are really based in a very small core of ideas.