Philosophy_of_Guitar wrote: ↑May 17th, 2024, 10:14 pmI have a friend who's a Jehovah's Witness. She believes that she's not worthy to be baptized because she had pre-marital sex and that Satan is in the wild to knock her down and tempt her at every step. Her best friend is gay and she believes he will go to hell! When I say "believe," in her mind and inner world, that's knowledge. She also has a few mood disorders including Major Depressive Disorder.
It's crystal clear to me that her mental disorders are tightly linked to her belief system. So in this case, her faith is causing her horrible suffering and a bleak worldview. Therefore, what she believes in is bad for her.
On the other hand, my other friend is Christian but separates religious from non-religious tasks and does just fine. I think then that's probably good.
My sister became a Jehovah's Witness. I would say she was depressed before joining up, hence her recruitment. My impression was that the religion satisfied her social needs - to find a nice, trustworthy husband without bad habits and a crowd of nice people whom she could trust. As a result, she struck me as pretty happy with it all. She didn't mind throwing away her knowledge and replacing it with fundamentalist superstition. After, the creation of the universe and evolution are arcane stuff that make little difference to one's daily life. In Camus's words, she committed "philosophical suicide".
At her funeral, there were about 260 or so Witnesses. I talked with dozens of them because she and I looked a bit alike, and I had the feeling that I was like I was a bridge to her for them, if that makes sense. I was amazed at how many of them not only knew her, but clearly knew her
well. She must have become a mighty networker
The beauty of religion is that you can set aside all of your questions about life and just get on with it. Unlike my sister, I was always always watching, assessing, wondering and questioning. She did that before religion, but after her conversion she got on with work, family life and friends.
Religion is a great idea. It brings societies together, facilitates control, acts as a social conduit and frees people from philosophical /existential concerns. It would seem more attractive to me personally if theists conceded that the magical aspects of their religion were either metaphorical or ancient "marketing", and to realise that miracles are available, but in your head. All you need is to want God in your head, and you have it. God is a purely subjective entity.
It's fascinating. Humans seem to function better when they put harsh reality through a softening filter. We apparently function better with BS than reality. Fair enough, too. Reality is not kind. The Earth has a history of extraordinary creation, albeit with suffering and death as major components.
I don't subscribe to Lovelock's Gaia, the one who is being destroyed by humans who are absurdly not considered to be part of Gaia. Destruction is simply part of the world's (often harsh) creative processes, as per prior extinction events.
Further, if the Earth has a mind, it is fragmented, more like the nerve net of a jellyfish than a chordate's brain. At present, the Earth has many billions of minds - from the simple minds of its invertebrates to its technology-enhanced humans.
I see the Earth slowly moving towards several loci of control, largely based on the US, China, India and Islam. However, over time (a very long time away, probably post-biology), there will probably be one single locus of control. That could be called Gaia/God.
Imagine single amalgamated super-mind awakens. It is alone in space, surrounded by mindlessness for trillions of kms. It would need to build bases all over the solar system for company, or it would go nuts or die. In time, Earth will be too hot or even a super-mind and it's superior tech, and it will need to move away. Maybe it will be able to store basic copies of its mind in Von Neumann probes and spread across the galaxy?
It would be rather godlike ...