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But you couldn't paint your vivid picture of the religious person without literature. The stupid religious people who read an empty word in a book, words which can't be tied to anything via the nominalist string and so forth.
But you seem to paint your picture just fine without the vital component of meditation; altered states of consciousness; mystical experience. That's a very common mistake among the irreligious.
"One problem with atheism as a category of thought, is that it seems more or less synonymous with not being interested in what someone like the Buddha or Jesus may have actually experienced. In fact, many atheists reject such experiences out of hand, as either impossible, or if possible, not worth wanting. Another common mistake is to imagine that such experiences are necessarily equivalent to states of mind with which many of us are already familiar—the feeling of scientific awe, or ordinary states of aesthetic appreciation, artistic inspiration, etc.
As someone who has made his own modest efforts in this area, let me assure you, that when a person goes into solitude and trains himself in meditation for 15 or 18 hours a day, for months or years at a time, in silence, doing nothing else—not talking, not reading, not writing—just making a sustained moment to moment effort to merely observe the contents of consciousness and to not get lost in thought, he experiences things that most scientists and artists are not likely to have experienced, unless they have made precisely the same efforts at introspection. And these experiences have a lot to say about the plasticity of the human mind and about the possibilities of human happiness.
So, apart from just commending these phenomena to your attention, I’d like to point out that, as atheists, our neglect of this area of human experience puts us at a rhetorical disadvantage. Because millions of people have had these experiences, and many millions more have had glimmers of them, and we, as atheists, ignore such phenomena, almost in principle, because of their religious associations—and yet these experiences often constitute the most important and transformative moments in a person’s life. Not recognizing that such experiences are possible or important can make us appear less wise even than our craziest religious opponents." -Sam Harris
So, let me tell you why I think you paint your picture without including an in-depth study of this area of human experience. I think it's because an armchair critic can't investigate it from the comfort of his chair, as you could reading Goethe. It requires commitment and training. That's why Sam goes on to say, "this can take a tremendous amount of work. And it is not work that our culture knows much about [...] to judge the empirical claims of contemplatives, you have to build your own telescope."
So you take the easy way out; you reduce it all to something an armchair critic can conveniently manage: books, appearances, language.
originally posted by: LesMisanthrope
For one, I am not against nor do I doubt anyone's mystical experience. What I do doubt is the importance of the mystical experience in states of affairs.
Yes, someone can contort their body to an extent that a mystical experience transpires, achieving altered states of consciousness through various means. I do not doubt that at all. But when I ask "What's the point?", I am presented with a hefty list of non-sequiturs—hidden knowledge, union with God, divinity etc.
Second, as I have already intimated, I have taken part in many of these rituals across various cultures in one degree or another, perhaps not extensively, but likely more than any armchair-mystic ever has. I have travelled for the better part of my life, and have sat in the streets, at the base of trees and peaks of mountains more than I have armchairs. Though I think your charge of armchair criticism is apt in most cases, I do not see how it applies to myself.
originally posted by: zazzafrazz
Some people need it.
Some people don't.
Some people were given no choice in it.
Some people found choice.
The cognitive and affective styles displayed by mystics ensure that multiple perspectives are expressed during collective decision-making processes. The perspectives mystics offer their societies increase the variation within the human “ideational pool”. These perspectives improve their chances for advantageous choices in times of threats or opportunities. Such an adaptation, producing variety in problem-solving skills, might be the source for the exceptionally wide range of personality types found within our species.'
Forgive me, but it just doesn't seem like you are keeping up with the relevant scholarship. What was the last book you read about any of this? When did you read it?
You and I see things very differently. Where you see non-sequiturs, I see poetry and metaphor which can be penetrated and internalized; used as a tool. Where you see enemies, I see merely opponents. Where you see empty words on a page, I see symbols of inner fullness.
It must be nice to spend so much of your life traveling and learning. We should all be so lucky.
So, you looked for God in ritual, in streets, under trees, on mountains. And during all that time, no one told you to look inside yourself through contemplative practices?
originally posted by: LesMisanthrope
Yes I believe there is an evolutionary advantage to religion.
I do not like reading mystics or about mystics. I’ve tried. The last essay I read on mysticism was probably Mysticism and Logic by Bertrand Russell. Because he is an atheist, you can imagine his definition of mysticism, but he paints it in a good light. I don’t remember when I read it. You’re forgiven.
Why would I look for God? Have I not made myself clear enough?
What the mystic accomplishes, what he thinks he accomplishes is, on any scale, mediocre at best in comparison to any artist, any inventor, or any thinker.
Maybe you could remember that the next time you ask yourself, "what's the point".
Oh boo hoo. Poor baby doesn't like reading scholarship about mystics.
Well, that's your choice. But it puts you in the 'willfully ignorant' category. You don't understand mysticism, therefore you don't understand religion. But you like crusading against it. That makes you self-indulgent and irresponsible.
ATS is about denying ignorance, not spreading it or indulging in it.
What exactly do you bring to the table, again? I mean other than your eloquence, charm, and wit.
Newsflash: you're still looking for God. Your strategy for finding it used to be, or include, travel. Now it is taunting temper tantrums on the net.
Both are poor strategies. Neither will help you.
The image of Clark Kent shouting taunts from the rooftop of The Daily Planet, daring Superman to show up.
Whenever you say something about mystics or what they say or do or how they do it, remember this. You don't know what the hell you're talking about.
originally posted by: LesMisanthrope
I don't ask myself. I ask others. They never answer "there is an evolutionary advantage". Besides, the "what's the point?" remark was in regards to the desire for mystical experiences, the "evolutionary advantage" remark was about religion. Not the same, unfortunately.
originally posted by: LesMisanthrope
I don't ask myself. I ask others. They never answer "there is an evolutionary advantage".
Besides, the "what's the point?" remark was in regards to the desire for mystical experiences, the "evolutionary advantage" remark was about religion. Not the same, unfortunately.
It is my choice. My study of religion is more in the area of anthropology, which, ironically, was inspired by Frazier's The Golden Bough, which we probably have in common.
I only bring some writing and arguments to the table.
Not a crusade, not a persecution, not even an opposition. If you haven't noticed, the thread is in favour of religion as an emergent cultural artifact. Nothing to fear, good sir. Stop crying.
Ipse dixit galore.
Yes, why don't you tell me what I'm looking for, BlueMule. That always seems to work.
This is why this is important to me. The charge of atheism, and the idea of the unbeliever, the blasphemer, the infidel etc., the idea that one does not believe in God, is a myth, brought to you by the same minds who invented the witch, the djinn, and the possessed. It is no wonder they lit atheists on fire—the atheist is a straw man, the misrepresentation of someone else’s position, based entirely on the circular assumption that there is a god to not believe in. By assuming this role, the atheist is embodying and breathing life into this myth. He is validating this straw man to the point where it is no longer a misrepresentation of his position, but an accurate description of his position.
I'm just not convinced of its importance, or that anyone with whom I'm conversing (besides you) would understand and I don't have the interest in delving into it as you have - to explain it. Because they're still going to think I'm a heathen and the "worst" kind of heretic - an atheist. And it's OK if people think of me that way, as part of my personality is that of a rebel.